ANALYSIS

NGOs and civil society under attack in Ukraine


by Taras Kuzio
Eurasian Daily Monitor

Valeriy Mishura, Communist national deputy and chairman of the Temporary Investigative Parliamentary Commission, recently issued his first report to Parliament on the implications of foreign financing of NGOs. Ukrainska Pravda, May 21). The commission has always understood its remit to investigate only Western funding of NGO's. Mr. Mishura's report concluded that the major aim of Western-financed NGOs was to influence this year's elections by bringing to power Viktor Yushchenko, the pro-Western leader of Our Ukraine. The majority of Western assistance to NGOs and civil society has reached only the national democratic opposition Our Ukraine and Yulia Tymoshenko bloc and, to a lesser extent, the Socialists (SPU).

The report also indicates that the two largest providers of assistance are the United States and Germany. The report lists well-known U.S. foundations, such as the National Democratic Institute, International Republican Institute, Freedom House, Eurasia Fund, National Democratic Institute, George Soros Foundation, as well as German institutions, including the Konrad Adenauer Foundation, which provide the bulk of Western assistance in support of civil society activity in Ukraine.

On the basis of the report, Mr. Mishura and fellow Communist National Deputy Yurii Solomatin called for Western-funded NGOs to be closed. Communist Party (CPU) leader Petro Symonenko insisted that Western-financed NGOs should at least be temporarily suspended during this year's elections (Ukrainska Pravda, May 21).

Two hundred eighty-nine national deputies had voted in December 2003 to create the Commission. This large majority was reached because the CPU and pro-presidential factions both voted in support of its creation. Our Ukraine and the SPU fully voted against the motion, while the populist Tymoshenko bloc split, with 5 of its 19 deputies supporting the commission. The campaign against NGOs - and by implication civil society - is the product of four factors.

First, there is an ingrained Soviet political culture that leads to "spy mania." CPU Chairman Symonenko is convinced that, "In the majority of cases, these structures (NGOs) are simply 'roofs' for the activities of foreign secret services." (Ukrainska Pravda, December 4, 2003) This view has widespread support in the pro-presidential camp. In a vehemently anti-American newspaper financed by the Social Democratic Party-United (SDPU), Yurii Smeshko, chairman of the Security Service of Ukraine (SBU), stated that the SDPU believes that NGOs and Western assistance are potential avenues for the overt collection of intelligence data (April 30, 2000).

Second, conspiracy theories are imported from Russia. Gleb Pavlovsky's Fund for Effective Politics, which worked closely with the SDPU in the 2002 Ukrainian parliamentary elections, developed the "[Zbigniew] Brzezinski Conspiracy," which has since obtained wide support within the CPU and the pro-presidential camp. President Leonid Kuchma is allegedly convinced that the CIA was behind Mykola Melnychenko, the presidential guard who recorded proceedings in his office between 1999 and 2000. The tapes were first made public in November 2000 and led to the Kuchmagate crisis.

Ukrainian and Russian adherents of the "Brzezinski Conspiracy" believe that the U.S., through its funding of NGOs, was behind the October 2000 Serbian and November 2003 Georgian democratic revolutions. Mr. Kuchma deliberately snubbed Georgian President Mikhail Saakashvili, refusing to meet him at the airport as protocol demands. This was the first time this has happened to a foreign state leader on an official visit to Ukraine (Ukraina Moloda, April 28).

Pro-presidential groups and the CPU have repeatedly stated their fear that the U.S. is preparing a "Kashtan revolution" (Wall Street Journal, February 11) in this year's elections, with the aim of bringing Mr. Yushchenko to power. This would be followed by Ukraine becoming a "U.S. and NATO protectorate," Mr. Symonenko maintains (Ukrainska Pravda, April 7). Mr. Mishura's report to Parliament alleges that the British Westminster Fund for Democracy has financed "secret training seminars" for young members of national democratic groups. The seminars had been taught by Serbian OTPOR and Belarusian ZUBR activists who trained their Ukrainian colleagues in how to undertake mass civic disturbances and oppose law enforcement agencies, as well as how to avoid arrest and, if arrested, how to act (www.temnik.com.ua, May 23).

A leaked presidential administration temnyk (secret instruction) dated March 18 instructed television channels to describe philanthropist George Soros's visit to Ukraine as espionage activity and an attempt to repeat the Serbian and Georgian revolutions in Ukraine. Three television channels controlled by Viktor Medvedchuk (State Television 1, 1+1, Inter) faithfully followed these guidelines, as did SDPU newspapers (Kievskiye Viedomosti, March 29 and 30; April 2-8, 2000). The CPU, SDPU and Russian media alleged that Mr. Soros's visit to the Crimea was aimed at training Crimean Tatars in the storming of the Ukrainian Parliament in a repeat of what took place in Serbia and Georgia. Such a view on foreign funding for Crimean Tatars leading to instability was supported by Mr. Kuchma and Russian Ambassador to Ukraine Viktor Chernomyrdin (Ukrainska Pravda, April 3; ITAR-TASS, March 29).

o Third, the Soviet legacy claims that pro-Western political groups do not possess genuine domestic roots but are implanted only due to financing by Western structures. Mr. Yushchenko and Our Ukraine are regularly assailed as a Western-financed political bloc. This view is shared by the CPU and its de facto pro-presidential allies. President Kuchma has openly claimed that Our Ukraine obtained its instructions from abroad as to how to relate to proposed constitutional changes (Ukrainska Pravda, March 2) Mr. Symonenko similarly believes that, "the political ruling bodies of the U.S. Embassy sit on the parliamentary balcony and control Our Ukraine," particularly as to how and when it should vote (Ukrainska Pravda, April 8).

o Fourth, Western criticism of Ukraine's poor record of democratization is side-stepped by condemning it as "interference" in Ukraine's internal affairs. The sole purpose of such "interference" is to bring the opposition to power by criticizing the authorities, Stepan Havrysh, pro-presidential parliamentary coordinator, said. Freedom House's 2004 annual world survey on media freedom, which severely criticized Ukraine, is "merely a public relations campaign for certain political groups (such as Mr. Yushchenko's) which are struggling for power in Ukraine," Mr. Havrysh alleged (Interfax-Ukraine, May 25).

President Kuchma is unlikely to authorize closure of Ukraine's NGOs, as the CPU and SDPU demand, as such a step would severely damage Ukraine's relations with the U.S. At the same time, the activities of NGOs are being restricted and curtailed in more covert ways.


Taras Kuzio is visiting professor at the Elliot School of International Affairs, George Washington University. The article above, which originally appeared in The Jamestown Foundation's Eurasia Daily Monitor, is reprinted here with permission from the foundation (www.jamestown.org).


Copyright © The Ukrainian Weekly, July 18, 2004, No. 28, Vol. LXXII


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