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1113, 8 September 2008
PM rebukes ‘hysterical’ Yushchenko. Publication in Financial Times
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1715, 4 September 2008
Yulia Tymoshenko to meet with U.S. Vice President Richard Cheney
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1333, 4 September 2008
Yulia Tymoshenko plans to distribute half of overall budget funds to local government
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1244, 4 September 2008
Tymoshenko expects that a constitutional majority in parliament will be found to introduce changes to the Constitution
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0956, 4 September 2008
Yulia Tymoshenko wants to introduce a parliamentary form of government in Ukraine
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2006, 3 September 2008
Address by Prime Minister of Ukraine Yulia Tymoshenko on political situation in Ukraine
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1637, 3 September 2008
BYuT Inform Newsletter - Issue 83
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1338, 3 September 2008
Yulia Tymoshenko believes BYuT and OU-PSD coalition should be preserved
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2137, 2 September 2008
Yulia Tymoshenko: The government fulfilled its promise in holding Miner’s Day in the Verkhovna Rada
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1915, 2 September 2008
Yulia Tymoshenko: Today miners united the Parliament
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Negotiations with Vice President of the United States Richard Cheney 5 September 2008
5 September 2008

Working visit to Lugans’k region. Celebration of Day of Miner 29 August 2008
29 August 2008

Working visit to Lugans’k region. Celebration of Day of Miner 29 August 2008
29 August 2008

Working visit to Lugans’k region. Celebration of Day of Miner 29 August 2008
29 August 2008

Working visit to Lugans’k region. Celebration of Day of Miner 29 August 2008
29 August 2008

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Personal web site of Yulia Tymoshenko
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Articles by Yulia Tymoshenko

Ukraine’s watershed election

1820, 24 March 2006    // Daily Times
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Yulia Tymoshenko,
former Prime Minister of Ukraine

Photo by Alexander ProkopenkoUkraine’s politics are not those of the steppe. Our voters cannot stroll in one direction during one poll, and in the opposite direction the next time they vote, without worrying about falling over the edge. Ukrainians are people of the watershed: we live on either one side or the other of a great divide.

A year ago, Ukrainians dared to risk the unfamiliar territory over the hill, and found democracy and the promise of a more open and honest economy. But democracy is messy; with some of our Orange Revolution’s promises postponed or disavowed by President Viktor Yushchenko, there is a chance that on March 26, when Ukrainians vote for a new parliament, they may in their disappointment choose to return to the realm of corrupt and autocratic rule.

The alternatives – for my country, for Russia, and for Europe – are clear. Of the three leading electoral coalitions, the forces that supported the Orange Revolution seek a modern and democratic future for our country. The other bloc offers the near-certainty of a return to a surly and squalid isolation – perhaps the beginning of the end of our hard-won independence.

Of course, our Orange forces are not perfect, and Viktor Yanukovich – who again opposes Ukraine’s democrats – is not Stalin reincarnated. But the records of both alternatives suggest that Ukraine under those who backed the Orange Revolution will remain a member of the club of democracies and open economies, whereas under Yanukovich, Ukraine would turn its back on reform, and may re-embrace the grimmest aspects of our Soviet past.

Yanukovich’s Party of the Regions has been leading in opinion polls for months, and the world should remember that Yushchenko’s ultimate triumph over him in 2004 was by a whisker, not a landslide. Moreover, Yushchenko used his year in power mostly to disappoint those whose votes he now needs.

The case against a Yanukovich counter-revolution is that it would be just that: a ruthless effort to undo Ukraine’s democratic and legal reforms. Moreover, he would not be left to himself to govern, but would be a marionette of the oligarchs who bankroll his party, and perhaps of Russia, which yearns – albeit more discretely than a year ago – for his triumph.

Yanukovich’s party contains the largest core of unreconstructed apparatchiks of any party. Many of its candidates seek office not to work for Ukraine’s betterment, but to gain parliamentary immunity from prosecution.

Some say we should not worry, that democracy and the market are now too well established in Ukraine to be replaced; that reform is irreversible; and that the country’s ruling oligarchic clans, like those of Eastern Europe, will in time become law-abiding capitalists. Alas, this view is based more on wishful thinking than on reality.

A year after the Orange Revolution demonstrated ordinary Ukrainians’ fidelity to liberty, Yanukovich still evinces no faith in democracy, and the “single economic space” with Russia that he backs will strengthen the abusive oligarchic system and rule out liberalisation. Yanukovich’s foreign policy might not be openly subservient to Russia, but it won’t also be a clearly pro-Western one either. A Yanukovich government promises the semi-neutrality of semi-paralysis.

Many who support Yanukovich do not necessarily wish to go back to the old days but are confused by the buffeting they have received in the past decade. Yanukovich panders to xenophobes and anti-Semites, and his strongest appeal is to the core of angry diehards who detest the collapse of Soviet power. He remains unrepentant about the obscene levels of corruption during his tenure as prime minister.

I do not claim that the Orange Revolution’s protagonists are paragons, and that the split between Yushchenko and me has not disheartened many of those who stood with us in the streets of Kyiv in the winter of 2004-2005. But no one can question that we brought more honest government, and the beginnings of a more open economy, to Ukraine. We began the battle against entrenched corruption, imposed the rule of law on Ukraine’s robber barons, and encouraged the birth of a vital civil society.

Most Ukrainians feel more secure because of these changes. This is why our people should know precisely what they are voting for this Sunday. I have pledged that, under no circumstances will I form a coalition government with Viktor Yanukovich. President Yushchenko should do the same. Only by restoring our partnership can we hope to keep our Orange Revolution’s promises.

Criminal and civil codes will be enforced; our courts will be allowed to find their feet and their freedom. Above all, the new Rada (parliament) will settle down to the business of enacting laws and monitoring the government, not carving up the budget among corrupt clans. We will fight for essential reforms to bring the country in line with European norms. Relations with Vladimir Putin’s Russia will be repaired.

Elections are seldom make-or-break affairs. This one is. For the battle for Ukraine’s liberty and independence was not decided last winter. A Yanukovich restoration would be a disaster for Ukraine, for Russia, and for Europe, because it would put Ukraine’s independence in question and tempt Russia with dreams of renewed empire. Only a second victory over Yanukovich can secure a future of freedom and hope for Ukraine’s people.

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Read more
1051, 14 August 2006 Protecting the opposition should be the president’s most important goal
1814, 28 July 2006 Yushchenko has nothing to lose and everything to gain in reunion with Tymoshenko
1542, 26 July 2006 FT: Anxiety on energy market
1257, 24 July 2006 What about the Maidan?
1611, 18 July 2006 Ukraine’s new crisis
1244, 17 July 2006 What will happen if the Party of Regions comes to power?
1139, 17 July 2006 Cowardice or Conspiracy
1826, 14 July 2006 The New York Times: Ukraine President’s Backers Urge a New Election
2236, 7 July 2006 Yulia Tymoshenko: "We will be either in the opposition or we will fight in a new election"
1942, 5 July 2006 Orange reunion. Tymoshenko takes over
1814, 23 June 2006 Tymoshenko reassures foreign investors
1054, 22 June 2006 Yulia Tymoshenko declares the Parliament coalition created
1555, 21 June 2006 Tymoshenko has won, the analyst says. The coalition will go ahead
1329, 16 June 2006 Kyiv Post: Ukrainians are not that easily fooled
1842, 9 June 2006 A nation divided: fact or myth?
1820, 9 June 2006 End to the deadlock in sight
1512, 8 June 2006 Book about Yulia Timoshenko is published in Lithuania and preparing to be released in France and Poland
1746, 7 June 2006 President recommends to consider the election results when discussing spheres of influence
1754, 1 June 2006 Kyiv Post: Yushchenko must convince Our Ukraine to accept the reality of a Tymoshenko premiership
1509, 30 May 2006 Orange Ñoalition should nominate Yulia Tymoshenko for the Prime Minister, says Tammy Lynch

Articles by Yulia Tymoshenko
1628, 7 September 2007 Honestly about the main. The Article of Yulia Tymoshenko to the weekly "Korrespondent"
1210, 30 June 2007 New Ukrainian Constitution: from parity of power to priority of rights. Yulia Tymochenko's article in Zerkalo nedeli
16 June 2007 Fall – 2007: faith, hope, love! Yilia Tymoshenko's article in "Zerkalo nedeli"
1423, 6 April 2007 Put it to the people. Yuliya Tymoshenko's article for "The Guardian"
1628, 10 January 2007 Germany, Europe, and Russia. Yulia Tymoshenko's article in Daily Times
2233, 25 January 2006 The Next Gas Crisis Awaits
1755, 7 December 2005 Ukraine’s Struggle for Law
1311, 28 June 2005 A Europe for All
1502, 24 December 2004 Ukraine’s Orange Christmas
2129, 30 November 2004 The Battle for Ukraine

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Video & Audio
3 September 2008
20 August 2008
Tymoshenko suggests to rename Presidential Office as "Ward #6"
6 August 2008
About overcoming of consequences of floods in Western Ukraine
31 July 2008
About help for flood-stricken areas, extraordinary session of parliament and changes to the 2008 state budget
21 July 2008
About results of meeting with Federal Chancellor of Germany Angela Merkel
13 July 2008
Interview for ICTV (about voting in parliament for dismissal of Government)
11 July 2008
Report of Y.Tymoshenko to parliament
9 July 2008
Y.Tymoshenko's press-conference about the new budget
4 June 2008
Y.Tymoshenko's press-conference
29 May 2008
The special project "Duel" on TRC "Ukraine"
Last news
8 September 2008
BYuT Inform Newsletter - Issue 84
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1113, 8 September 2008
PM rebukes ‘hysterical’ Yushchenko. Publication in Financial Times
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1217, 6 September 2008
Press conference of Yulia Tymoshenko for central and regional mass media
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5 September 2008
Yulia Tymoshenko carried on negotiations with Vice President of the United States Richard Cheney
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2129, 4 September 2008
Yulia Tymoshenko held a telephone conversation with Prime Minister of Poland Donald Tusk
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1715, 4 September 2008
Yulia Tymoshenko to meet with U.S. Vice President Richard Cheney
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1333, 4 September 2008
Yulia Tymoshenko plans to distribute half of overall budget funds to local government
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1244, 4 September 2008
Tymoshenko expects that a constitutional majority in parliament will be found to introduce changes to the Constitution
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0956, 4 September 2008
Yulia Tymoshenko wants to introduce a parliamentary form of government in Ukraine
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2023, 3 September 2008
Yulia Tymoshenko to participate in opening of Council of Europe migration conference
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