Dmytro Firtash, one of Ukraine's most influential oligarchs, billionaire and industrialist, listens during a Reuters interview in Vienna, Austria, December 2, 2015. Credit: REUTERS/Leonhard Foeger
Oligarchism is an anachronism. It not only retards economic growth, but prevents Ukraine from blossoming into a modern and effective state.
In the twenty-eight years
since independence, oligarchism has subjugated Ukraine into a form of moral,
political, and economic serfdom. Oligarchs and their corrupt coteries have kept
Ukraine’s citizens poor, made them feel politically impotent, and forced them
into daily moral compromises.
In post-election Ukraine,
oligarchism is a disease that continues to suffocate the country in its
democratic transformation.
A cancer, its parasitic
properties keeping the body politic of Ukraine in constant sickness,
debilitating it, keeping it weakened and handicapped, preventing any hope for
recovery, let alone overcoming it and thus beginning the start of a new life.
The reassertion of oligarchs
in public life necessitates the garnering of courage for making a moral
judgement that in its imposition will empower a process of disconnection from
the dictates of the soviet inspired ancien regime.
This expression of moral indignation, legally codified and practically expressed through the application of the rule of law, would allow for the formation of a new societal order inspired by equality, justice, economic opportunity, and peaceful civil life.
It is no longer enough to
rhetorically discredit oligarchism but time to re-energize and translate moral
indignation into an uncompromising commitment of energy to eradicating its
perfidious influence within its institutions and public life.
It’s time for prison terms and
the assertion of the rule of law. It also is time to draw the proverbial line
in the sand, that the corrupt oligarchical practices in the economy, in
politics, and in greater Ukrainian society will no longer be tolerated.
However, legal prosecutions
must not be inspired by political revenge or class envy, but for the need to
assert a new set of governing values, holding to account the individuals who
stole the country’s wealth and whose business behavior continues to stifle
economic growth and to corrupt the institutions of justice.
The essential preoccupation of
Ukrainian civic and political life must be the establishment of an efficacious
legal based order worthy of a modern state and economy, where justice is
paramount.
Criminal investigations,
political corruption, and the judicial system are still far from free of pay
offs and corrupt influence. The Rubicon towards a rules-based society will not
have been crossed until members of this “public criminal” class have been
jailed.
However, the sad truth is that
Ukrainian institutions are not yet strong enough to thwart the influence of the
oligarchy. Without the direct influence, assistance, and continual Western
pressure, it will be years before this capability is developed.
During the Poroshenko
administration, not one prominent member of this class was incarcerated. This
was an apocalyptic failure.
Oligarchs must be marginalized
in Ukraine’s public life. Not tolerated, and treated as the public criminals
that they are, reduced to being peripherals rather than essential participants
in the building of a new Ukraine.
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Oligarchs in Ukraine want the
continuation of the old order and the maintenance of the status quo, as only
this form of governance will maintain their selfish political and economic
interests.
Regardless of their public pronouncements,
oligarchs don’t want democracy. They don’t want the establishment of liberal
democratic values, they don’t care for the rule of law or any type of western
civil society behaviors. They don’t want the foreign investment or the
competition that it brings nor the economic benefits that this will bring to
the ordinary citizen. They surely don’t want to submit to the influences of
western type governance practices in either the economy or politics.
Engagement with oligarchs is
not a benign form of partnership, but a philosophically inconsistent and
immoral collaboration, which will only lead to disappointment and a severe
dashing of hope and expectation of Ukraine’s transformers and people. Worse
yet, it is a blatant example of hypocrisy.
Their charitable monies and
attempts at public rehabilitation must be rejected. Have the lessons of
Coppola’s “Godfather” saga and Michael Corleone’s quest for legitimacy been
forgotten?
Let no one be fooled,
oligarchs as individuals and as a class do not believe nor support the
transformation of Ukraine for their essence makes them a rival nemesis to a
democratic and rules-based Ukraine.
Yuri Polakiwsky is a Kyiv-based
writer and author of “Ukraine – A Lament of a Promise
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It’s time for prison terms and the assertion of the rule of law. It also is time to draw the proverbial line in the sand, that the corrupt oligarchical practices in the economy, in politics, and in greater Ukrainian society will no longer be tolerated.
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