Statement
of Borys Wrzesnewskyj, MP, on Intimidation
of Rev. Borys Gudziak, Rector, Ukrainian Catholic University
Ottawa -
The 1.2 million Ukrainian Canadians saw the fulfillment of the dreams of their
parents and grandparents, the fulfillment of an ancestral dream, with the birth
of the Ukrainian state.
The Ukrainian Canadian
community was proud that after the Referendum for Independence on December 1, 1991,
when 92 percent of Ukraine’s
people voted for independence, Canada and
Poland
were the first two countries to formally acknowledge this new state.
We were equally proud when,
during the Orange Revolution, Canada’s
government called upon Ukraine’s
former President Kuchma to respect democracy and dangerously meddlesome Russian
President Putin to keep their hands off Ukraine. Canada
sent 500 official election observers to guarantee that the will of the
Ukrainian people, that democracy, was respected. People in the streets of Kyiv
would stop those of us wearing Canada
flag pins, embrace us and repeatedly say “thank you Canada,”
“thank you for helping to save our democracy and statehood.”
However, today the regime of
newly-elected President Yanukovych, the first President of Ukraine elected by
less than 50 percent of the people who voted, has taken a series of actions
which have sent a chill throughout Ukraine, Central and Eastern Europe, and the
Ukrainian diaspora, including the Ukrainian Canadian community.
In the last several weeks,
we’ve heard of state-sanctioned attempts to muzzle Ukraine’s
media; we’ve heard of a campaign of trumped-up criminal corruption charges
against opposition leaders. The parliament has descended into chaos. Last year
in Crimea, spies of the FSB (Russia’s successor agency to the KGB) were
expelled for financing so-called Russian cultural groups which were allegedly
engaged in organizing paramilitary training and in the propagation of separatist
ideologies). Today, FSB spies have been invited back into Ukraine
with the sanction of the President’s Office and Putin’s smiling approval.
And most recently, secret
service agents have engaged in attempts to intimidate and co-op university
rectors. On May 18 at 9:27
a.m., Rev. Prof. Borys Gudziak, Ph.D., the Rector
of Ukraine’s renowned Ukrainian Catholic University
received a call on his cell phone from a Security Service of Ukraine (SBU)
agent. Twenty minutes later, this security service agent was in the Rector’s
Office. What followed was an hour of attempts to co-op and intimidate the
Rector into spying on student have activists and to obtain the names of student
protest organizers.
Not since the days of the Soviet
Union has the Ukrainian Catholic Church and its
institutions, its priests, its seminarians, and its theology students been
menaced in this way.
Canada has
a special relationship with Ukraine and
has stood shoulder-to-shoulder with the people of Ukraine
during their journey towards statehood and democracy.
We will not stand by and
watch as that democracy and statehood is methodically disassembled by the
current regime. Once again we stand shoulder-to-shoulder with students of the Ukrainian Catholic University,
with all of Ukraine’s
students, professors, rectors, journalists and those who have dedicated
themselves to a free and independent Ukraine.
On May 28th,
Borys Wrzesnewskyj, MP (Etobicoke Centre, Lib.) delivered a statement in Canada’s
House of Commons, Ottawa, on
intimidation in Ukraine, particularly,
Rev. Borys Gudziak of the Ukrainian Catholic University.
See Hansard for House of Commons Debates, Statements by Members, May 28, 2010.
The "Memorandum
Regarding the Visit to UCU of a representative of the Security Service of
Ukraine (SBU) – former KGB – responsible for contacts with Churches in
Lviv" may be obtained at: http://www.ucu.edu.ua/eng/current/chronicles/article;4693/.
PHOTO
MP Borys Wrzesnewskyj