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END NOTE: UKRAINIAN PRESIDENT NOMINATES 'STOPGAP' PRIME MINISTER xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
UKRAINE'S ORANGE REVOLUTION SAID TO BE FINANCED BY RUSSIAN TYCOON. Former Ukrainian President Leonid Kravchuk, a lawmaker of the Social Democratic Party-united, charged on 14 September that exiled Russian oligarch Boris Berezovskii financed the presidential election campaign of Viktor Yushchenko, Ukrainian and international media reported. If found to be true, Ukrainian lawmakers would have the right to impeach Yushchenko, Kravchuk said. Kravchuk told journalists in Kyiv that, in a telephone conversation with him, Berezovskii confirmed the authenticity of recently published copies of bank transfers worth $15 million from Berezovskii-owned businesses to firms financing Yushchenko's campaign. According to Kravchuk, Berezovskii told him that Yushchenko's emissaries -- David Zhvaniya, Roman Bezsmertnyy, and Oleksandr Tretyakov -- visited Berezovskii in London to arrange issues connected with the campaign funding. Meanwhile, the "Ukrayinska pravda" website quoted Berezovskii as saying on 14 September that he did not tell Kravchuk that the transfers were made specifically for Yushchenko's presidential campaign. The same day, acting Emergency Minister Zhvaniya denied that Berezovskii financed Yushchenko's campaign, adding that the Russian oligarch "gave money to [Yuliya] Tymoshenko, and there is no need to push Zhvaniya into this clique." JM
OUSTED UKRAINIAN PREMIER URGES PRESIDENT TO REUNITE. Former Prime Minister Yuliya Tymoshenko, who was sacked by Yushchenko last week (see "RFE/RL Newsline," 14 September 2005), told Reuters on 14 September that Yushchenko could "recognize his mistake" and rejoin forces for the parliamentary elections in 2006. "Despite the fact that the president has accused me of various acts against the national interest, I believe he can always take the road back," Tymoshenko said. "We do have different visions on moral aspects of wielding power. And this is a fundamental difference. I proposed to the president not to wage war with political forces occupying a single ideological niche, but rather to support them all." Commenting on a new cabinet to be formed by Yuriy Yekhanurov, Tymoshenko said it will be "very temporary." JM
UKRAINIAN PRESIDENT NOMINATES 'STOPGAP' PRIME MINISTER
Immediately after dismissing the government of Prime Minister Yuliya Tymoshenko on 8 September, President Viktor Yushchenko announced that he wanted Dnipropetrovsk Oblast Governor Yuriy Yekhanurov to form a new cabinet. On 13 September, Yushchenko submitted the candidacy of Yekhanurov for the Verkhovna Rada's approval, stressing that he wants to have a "pragmatic government." Yekhanurov needs at least 226 votes to obtain the job.
Most political observers in Ukraine do not foresee any problems in Yekhanurov's approval, particularly after Yushchenko and Yekhanurov on 13 September signed a Declaration of Unity and Cooperation for the Future with leaders of parliamentary factions comprising nearly 240 deputies. The signatories pledged to pool their efforts "to secure the interests of the Ukrainian people, improve their welfare, consolidate society, and boost Ukraine's authority in the world." Making a new cabinet get down to work without delay is no doubt a priority in this endeavor.
Yekhanurov is widely seen in Ukraine as an experienced and efficient administrator without political ambitions. Therefore, many assert, he is the best choice Yushchenko could made for the six months that remain until the parliamentary elections in March, when the political scene in Ukraine may undergo a considerable rearrangement. In other words, Yekhanurov is seen as a "stopgap" prime minister whose main concerns will be to draft a 2006 budget, secure a tolerable price for Russian gas supplies next year, and push through the parliament what remains of the previous cabinet's package of bills intended to facilitate Ukraine's access to the World Trade Organization by the end of this year.
Yekhanurov, an ethnic Buryat, was born in a village in Sakha (Yakutia) in 1948. His family moved to Ukraine in 1963. In Kyiv, Yekhanurov graduated from a construction school in 1967 and from the Institute of People's Economy in 1973. He climbed the career ladder in the construction industry to the post of deputy director for economic issues of Kyiv's main construction directorate.
After Ukraine gained independence in 1991, Yekhanurov moved to the Cabinet of Ministers, where he initially served as a departmental director and then was promoted to the post of deputy economy minister.
In 1994-97 he oversaw the initial stage of Ukraine's privatization as head of the State Property Fund. Subsequently he served as economy minister and deputy head of the presidential administration. At that time he belonged to the People's Democratic Party, a "party of power" that provided political support to President Leonid Kuchma.
In 1998 Yekhanurov was elected to the Verkhovna Rada from a one-seat constituency in Zhytomyr Oblast. From 1999 to 2001 he worked as first deputy prime minister in a cabinet headed by Viktor Yushchenko. When Yushchenko's was dismissed as premier in 2001, Kuchma employed Yekhanurov as first deputy head of the presidential administration.
In November 2001, Yekhanurov left Kuchma for good and tied his political fate closely to that of Yushchenko. He became deputy chief of the election campaign of Yushchenko's Our Ukraine bloc and was elected to parliament in March 2002 from Our Ukraine's list. In 2004, Yekhanurov became deputy chief of Yushchenko's presidential election campaign. In March 2005, he was elected head of the executive committee of the Our Ukraine People's Union, Yushchenko's "party of power." In April, Yushchenko appointed Yekhanurov governor of Dnipropetrovsk Oblast after his predecessor was accused of having backed Yushchenko's rival in the presidential election.
Perhaps it is also not without significance for Yushchenko in his current situation that Yekhanurov is one of the very few in the Ukrainian president's entourage who back Ukraine's membership in the Single Economic Space with Russia, Kazakhstan, and Belarus. "This is a businesslike man, a man who deeply understands economics and economic relations, including those between states," Russian Ambassador to Ukraine Viktor Chernomyrdin praised Yekhanurov earlier this week.
In other words, Yekhanurov appears to be the opposite of the politically overambitious and charismatic Tymoshenko, whom Yushchenko accused of focusing on "PR activities" rather than on the presidential election program. Yekhanurov seems to be the man that will easily accept his place in the shadow of Yushchenko. But this may have drawbacks for the Ukrainian president as well, because now voters will be more likely to see Yushchenko -- not Yekhanurov -- as the real leader of the government. If things in Ukraine continue to go poorly, Yushchenko will not be able to lay all of the blame on Yekhanurov and fire him as the main culprit, as he did with Tymoshenko.
STATE DUMA REJECTS MEASURE TO SET UP FUND FOR HURRICANE KATRINA VICTIMS. State Duma deputies rejected on 14 September a proposal by Liberal Democratic Party Deputy Aleksei Mitrofanov to establish a special fund to help U.S. citizens affected by Hurricane Katrina, Ekho Moskvy and RosBalt reported. The initiative received just 41 of the 226 votes needed to pass. Mitrofanov said that controls would have to be established over the distribution of the humanitarian assistance, "otherwise the poor blacks will never get it." According to RosBalt, the authors of the initiative said that bureaucratic U.S. officials behaved in the recent crisis like Soviet authorities after the Chornobyl accident. Interfax reported on 14 September that two transport planes airlifted 44 tons of relief to the disaster area last week and an additional planeload organized by the Emergency Situations Ministry left Moscow in the morning. State Duma deputies also rejected a bill proposed by the Motherland faction that would have given the State Duma the power to remove individual cabinet ministers from their posts through a vote of no confidence, ITAR-TASS reported. The vote was 97 in favor to nine against. JAC