Reading this newspaper is often a sorrowful exercise. Just
when it seems that things could not get any worse, something happens that
shows things not only can get worse but do. Take for example the assault
on Kyiv Patriarch Filaret by adherents of the Moscow Patriarchate. Of course,
there have been wars and other less than pleasant occurrences over religion,
but one thinks of them as belonging to the sixteenth or seventeenth century,
surely not to our "civilized" era. Klara Gudzyk rightly questions just
how civilized we are, after all.
President Kuchma's being named no. 6 in the world's worst enemies of
press freedom also cannot be passed over in silence. In the last presidential
election former President Kravchuk also used the media as much as he could,
but in the final analysis he honestly ran, honestly lost, and honestly
turned his office over to his successor. Nobody sees much sign of that
happening come October. Kievskie vedomosti, recently reopened after
being shut down by a lawsuit, carried an article criticizing this newspaper.
Let them. We would much rather have critics than closed periodicals. We
look forward to their next attack, if they get the chance.
Yet another sign of degradation is Oleksiy Plotnykov's sad tale of Ukraine's
continual economic decline. Add to that the new regime being imposed on
the nation's number one piggy-bank, the Savings Bank. It seems depositors'
savings will be risked in the form of "investment" in politically connected
enterprises. Of course nobody expects those loans to ever be repaid, which
means that after the elections this nation's entire banking system could
come tumbling down like a house of cards. Just when it seems there is nowhere
left to fall, we see ourselves sinking deeper than even yesterday seemed
possible.






