JACK LOSH
When Mikheil
Saakashvili, the former
president of Georgia and arch critic of Russia’s Vladimir Putin, was appointed
governor of Odessa in Ukraine, this summer, he vowed to wage war on corruption.
The flamboyant, post-Soviet maverick insisted that even the most powerful
oligarchs and entrenched vested interests would not escape his plans for
radical reform.
His latest appointment, however, has dealt a
humiliating blow to his self-styled crusade, with many fearing it could
threaten to derail the pace and potency of the clampdown.
Despite having no experience in customs enforcement, Mr Saakashvili’s
26-year-old protégée, Yulia Marushevska, today begins her new job: head of
customs at Odessa’s famous, lucrative and notoriously corrupt port on the Black
Sea.
Ms Marushevska became a poster girl for last year’s
Maidan revolution after starring in a viral YouTube video, “I am a Ukrainian”,
filmed at the centre of the street protests that eventually toppled former
Ukrainian president Viktor Yanukovich.
A cancer of crime, corruption and oligarchy burgeoned
in the elegant port city of Odessa following the fall of the USSR,
and continued under Mr Yanukovich’s kleptocracy. Entrepreneurs complain that
bribery is endemic and that government inspectors levy inflated fees by
overvaluing cargo. Transparency International’s Corruption Perceptions Index
rates Ukraine 142nd in the world, alongside Uganda. Since the country declared
independence 14 years ago, billionaire businessmen and crooked officials of all
ranks have helped cripple the economy by plundering the state budget, as living
standards for ordinary Ukrainians stagnated.
Odessa seaport's vital statistics - plus potential for
profit - are eye-watering. Run in state-private partnership, it handles more
than 40 million tonnes of cargo a year and has an annual capacity for four
million tourists. Cargo ranges from oil and liquefied gas to metals, consumer
goods and bulk foodstuffs.
Ms Marushevska has an arts degree from Kiev National University and
studied at Stanford University in the US, but there are fears that her youth
and drastic inexperience in maritime customs makes a mockery of Ukraine’s
pledge to clamp down on rampant corruption.
President Petro Poroshenko, who announced the
appointment last week, has waded into the debate on her suitability for the
high-ranking job, although his statement seemed to confirm rather than allay
fears. “This is a modest, but very beautiful, efficient and talented woman,
despite the fact that she has no training in customs,” he said. “But she does have
very good organisational skills.”
Mr
Saakashvili, likewise, appeared unruffled by criticisms, hailing his acolyte’s
inexperience as “not a problem, but an advantage”. He poured scorn on the
previous customs regime, branding them “professional extortionists”.
Mr
Saakashvili's latest appointment has been greeted with disbelief by many
Ukrainians. An agent with one of Ukraine’s main shipping firms, who asked to
remain anonymous for fear of being fired, told The Independent: “She may be
young and pretty, but the customs regime there needs more than a PR facelift.
My company pays ‘fees’ all the time to the Odessa port authorities on behalf of
our overseas clients. It's been happening for years. This new figurehead may
have good intentions but she won’t know what’s hit her.”
“The big
problem is that she seems completely unqualified for perhaps the hardest job in
Ukraine – reforming one of the most corrupt ports in Europe,” said an NGO
official in Kiev, who declined to give his name. “Throwing her into that job is
either a joke made in the face of the people, or a very calculated plan to
establish control over the port authority. Time will tell.”
Ms
Marushevska, originally from a village in neighbouring Mykolayiv region,
enjoyed a meteoric rise to become Odessa’s deputy governor after joining
Saakashvili’s team this summer. When quizzed about her new role, she insisted
that a strong team will compensate for her lack of knowledge. “I am happy that
professionals are around me,” she said. “I am going to communicate, promote and
attract international partners.” She added: “My purpose is purely political and
does not require special training and experience in this field."
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