Looking into the Abyss
Mr. Holovaty's accurate, if dismal, scenario of what would happen should Ukraine select the Belarus option is especially frightening because, unlike back in 1994 when I first wrote that Ukraine had the choice of taking the route of either Poland or Belarus, today this country seems to have firmly stepped on the road away from Europe and toward Eurasia. This has little to do with the silly statements by Speaker Tkachenko and Comrade Symonenko or even the lack of any public consensus on what kind of country Ukraine ought to be. It has everything to do with the way the country works politically, economically, and socially. Any given issue of this newspaper offers a wealth of examples. Mr. Holovaty is not the only prominent person in Ukraine who knows the problem. The trouble is, that except for a few like him (who have been invariably marginalized once in office), those in a position to change things have personal interests which keep them from doing so. And Mr. Holovaty has done a great service both in opening up the issue for public airing (this is still a place where people prefer to keep discreetly silent until somebody shows them that one really can speak up) and in showing us all where the road is leading.
One more thing, Mr. Holovaty is right that choosing between the criminalized
administration this country now has and the hard Left is like being given
the choice between being shot or hanged. Either way, Ukraine just would
not make it. Moreover, the soaring popularity of Progressive Socialist
Natalia Vitrenko, whose devotion to the values of democratic discourse
was so eloquently demonstrated when she and her party sidekick beat to
a pulp Pavlo Movchan on the floor of Parliament and sent him to the hospital,
means that more and more people are fed up with the way things are, and
they are perfectly willing to exchange them for the way things were. With
a few more outspoken figures like Holovaty, perhaps this country could
be turned toward yet another alternative: the way things could be.
Выпуск газеты №:
№15, (1999)Section
Day After Day