#47 - JRL 2007-123 - JRL Home
RIA Novosti
May 31, 2007
Ukraine: nothing irrevocable
MOSCOW. (RIA Novosti political commentator Dmitry Shusharin) - Triumvirates
worked well for ancient Rome, albeit never survived for long. The triple
alliance of President Viktor Yushchenko, Prime Minister Viktor Yanukovych and
Parliament Speaker Alexander Moroz was formed under the pressure of an imminent
armed conflict, and consequently implied no parity.
It was clear from the very beginning that the president and prime minister
would keep their offices, while the speaker would probably have to go. His
opponents have been quite open about it.
However, the problem is deeper than the three politicians' prospects. It
looks like Ukraine's political culture in general does not require strict
observance of agreements, especially of bizarre ones like the "triple union."
None of its parties could guarantee commitment, because none of them possessed
any levers to pressure the Rada members into acting within the outlined
framework.
The three officials have eventually failed to find common ground.
Yanukovych confessed to having disagreements with Yushchenko and demanded the
extension of parliament's session by more than two days so that it would have
time to pass a series of socio-economic development bills.
Moroz, the main trouble-maker, predictably threw out the agenda, thus
violating the triple agreement.
The above is evidence that democracy actually reigns in Ukraine. The triple
deal was made for a reason, and was a good thing for the time being. The three
politicians seemed to realize that their brawl could grow into an armed
conflict, and armed people would be almost impossible to control.
When the president and the interior minister issue mutually exclusive orders,
regular army commanders turn into field commanders. But the politicians who
allowed this to happen will be held responsible for the consequences.
That is why the Ukrainian president, prime minister and speaker chose to
strike a union deal, feeble as it was. But their agreement was not confirmed by
any procedures. The parliament-dissolving decree was never considered by the
Constitutional Court. Moreover, the triple agreement excluded the Constitutional
Court's contribution to the settlement of the crisis. And of course, no laws
stipulate that a parliament session should last for a specified period of time
and strictly adhere to a specific agenda.
Despite the odd situation, the three politicians have attained their most
important goal - they have avoided the armed conflict scenario. As for the
prospects, it has become clearer than ever that Ukraine is a lucky country which
abhors final decisions.
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