Andrew
Wilson
The resignation of Ukrainian PM Arseniy
Yatsenyuk and the elevation of Volodymyr Groisman demonstrates the failure
of Kyiv’s reform process, and offers Europe an opportunity to push for deeper
changes.
And while Ukraine suffers from many types of
corruption, it is the penetration of its politics by the super-rich oligarchy
that forms the main obstacle to reform.
Wealth is concentrated in few hands in Ukraine. Before
the Euromaidan protests of 2013 the assets of Ukraine’s 50 richest
individuals made up over 45 percent of GDP, almost five times as much as in the
US. Politics in Ukraine is extraordinarily expensive, with campaign
expenditures running at hundreds of millions of dollars. And oligarchical media
ownership further strengthens the hold of the wealthy over Ukraine’s democracy.
The author highlights two key areas, the
judiciary and Ukraine’s state-owned enterprises, where the nascent process of
‘de-oligarchisation’ has failed to take hold. Control over the courts means
that there have been no high-profile leading figures from the Yanukovych era
brought to trial. And Ukraine’s state-owned enterprises siphon off government
funds to the pockets of oligarchs, providing further funds for them to control
events in Kyiv.
The EU remains Ukraine’s only plausible ally and, as
such, has the potential to wield a huge amount of influence over the reform
process. Wilson highlights two main areas that European policy makers should
focus on, both of which focus on decoupling the oligarchs from the political
system, rather than attacking the oligarchy itself.
The first step should be to strengthen the pressure
applied on the Ukrainian authorities from below, by local civil society.
Engagement could take the form of encouraging the participation of Ukrainian
NGOs in EU-Ukrainian government dialogue.
The EU and its member states should also pressure
Ukraine’s leaders, who are perpetuating and in some cases directly benefiting
from some of the worst practices of the Yanukovych regime. Abuses by oligarchs’
placemen in the state bureaucracy and others must be
investigated.
No comments:
Post a Comment