Four years after ‘Euromaidan,’ corruption is still king in Ukraine
24/2/18
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A commemoration ceremony at the monument to the so-called “Nebesna Sotnya” (Heavenly Hundred), Ukraine |
Four years ago this weekend, Ukraine’s
democratically-elected, albeit deeply corrupt, government was overthrown in a
Western-backed coup which set off a chain reaction of events, tearing one of Europe’s largest countries asunder.
The “EuroMaidan” movement pledged to wipe out corruption,
improve living standards and integrate Ukraine into the west. On all
counts, it has failed miserably.
In 2014, Ukrainian incomes were already paltry. But today,
not only does the country compete with Moldova
for the dubious distinction of having the lowest salaries in Europe,
its GDP per capita is now below El
Salvador and Libya
and wedged between Laos and Vietnam in raw
dollar terms. Nevertheless, despite these difficulties, it did manage to rise
four places in the Doing Business 2018 ranking of the World Bank.
At the same time, the European Union is increasingly
frustrated at Ukraine’s
failure to reform. Indeed, only this week, Brussels
scrapped a €29 billion border checkpoint scheme amid rancor over Kiev’s failure to deliver
on certain promises. The move came after it emerged that a firm specializing in
installing ventilation units had been given the contract, for reasons unknown.
Steal Liberally
And this brings us to Ukraine’s main
problem: Corruption. Maidan promised to usher in a new era of transparency.
But, in reality, the resultant financial collapse didn’t curb the hunger of its
ravenous officials and business leaders. Instead, after a brief interregnum
following the change of power, they simply took a larger share of the smaller pie. Thus,
the pain has been inflicted on ordinary citizens, while the elite continue to
enjoy the high living standards to which they’ve become accustomed.
For instance, at New
Year’s, while the average Ukrainian struggled to put together a celebration on
their meagre salaries, the elite partied in style. Instead of showing empathy
towards victims of the economic disaster he has helped to create, President
Petro Poroshenko “took a secret, vastly
expensive, week-long Christmas vacation in the Maldives,” according to the Kiev Post. The newspaper
alleged that the Oligarch dropped $500,000 on the seven-day vacation for ten
people. An amount equivalent to over 189 years pay for the typical worker in
his country.
They say a fish rots from
the head and Poroshenko’s poor example swiftly trickled down, with Prosecutor
General Yuri Lutsenko reported to have paid at least $65,000 for a Seychelles trip
around the same time. To the astonishment of observers, Lutsenko then claimed
his holiday “was nothing excessive,”
adding “this is something a typical
middle-class Ukrainian can afford.” Also, as it happens, the cost
of Lutsenko’s trip amounted to almost double his $36,000 annual declared
income.
Of course, the
extravagance of the Ukrainian elite is nothing new. And it’s been well
documented how ousted President Viktor Yanukovich built a palace near Kiev, complete with pet Ostriches and a golf
course.
But Maidan was supposed
to change this. And the entire movement was
based on an almost messianic belief that it would end Ukraine’s
original sin of corruption. Yet, despite these lofty ideals, the leaders it
spawned have more in common with the Borgias than with Saint Francis of Assisi.
Counting Horror
The human toll of Maidan
has also been extraordinary. Given the post-coup/revolution regime was
dominated by western Ukrainians, an insurgency kicked off in the east and
south, with ethnic-Russian locals fearful their culture would fall victim to
nationalists. Thus, backed by varying degrees of Moscow
support, Crimea, and parts of Lugansk and the Donbas separated from Ukraine. And
while the former (where thousands of Russian troops were already legally
stationed) enjoyed a smooth divorce, the latter pair have endured a horrible
war, with over 10,000 deaths so far. No end appears to be in
sight, as Kiev refuses to fulfil its obligations
under the Minsk peace agreements, and Moscow shows few signs of
softening its stance on how the deal must be implemented in full.
The chaos has brought
disillusion and hardship. Today, around 60% of Ukrainians live below the poverty line. Meanwhile, over one million (mostly young people) have moved to Poland since Maidan and, as of last November, 427,240 were seeking asylum in Russia. That is
in addition to the 2.6 million Ukrainians already in Russia, half of
them ‘guest workers.’
On an absurd note, Vice News reported three years ago that many of the
leading activists who inflicted Maidan on the Ukrainian people had already left
the country within twelve months of the disaster they wrought. Evidently not
willing to pay for what they had helped to break.
Sad Truth
Yet, if we are looking
for the root causes of Maidan, and the political turmoil that still grips Ukraine
(opposition activist Mikhail Saakashvili was banned from the country for three years this
week, we need to look beyond labels like pro-Western or pro-Russian. Firstly,
because Poroshenko, Yanukovich and company are more pro-themselves than
anything else, and because most ordinary Ukrainians don't really care whether
their rulers suck up to Moscow, Washington or Brussels,
or all three.
Put simply, the central
reason for Ukraine’s
turmoil lies in the disintegration of living standards since independence. According to the European Bank for
Reconstruction and Development, every single Ukrainian worker is worse off
today than they were under Soviet communism in 1989. Until that changes, the
country will hurtle from anarchy to meltdown and back again.
Many naive westerners believe how ‘reform,’ glacial as it
may be, will eventually transform Ukraine into an oasis of
transparency. However, these, mostly well-meaning dunces are too ideologically
blinkered to fathom the reality: corruption is not just the problem in Ukraine, it is
the system itself. The entire social order is based on patronage, back-handers
and ‘a nod and a wink’. And the only possible chance for rehabilitation would
be to smash the entire set-up and start again from scratch.
This was where Maidan,
predictably failed. The movement's American ‘friends’ selected leaders who were previously embedded
in the old regime and the current President was himself a member of
Yanukovich’s cabinet (first as Foreign minister, before moving to Trade).
Maidan was a mistake. But so too has been almost every move Ukraine has
made since 1991. Expect plenty more missteps to come.
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