Paul
Goble
Staunton, December 9 – Despite
Vladimir Putin’s call for the federalization of Ukraine and Petro Poroshenko’s
suggestion that he is prepared to oversee steps toward the decentralization of
power in his country, nothing can be done toward either under the current
crisis conditions, according to Moscow’s leading expert on Ukraine.
Bogdan Bezpalko, deputy director of
the Center for Ukrainian and Belarusian Studies at Moscow State University and
a member of the Presidential Council on Inter-Ethnic Relations, says any talk
about decentralization now is simply “rhetoric” with no chance of being
realized (actualcomment.ru/v-usloviyakh-krizisa-protsessy-reformirovaniya-territorialnogo-ustroystva-na-ukraine-nevozmozhny.html).
Decentralization
in Ukraine should
and could have been discussed before the current crisis, “before its hot and
bloody stage,” Bezpalko says. At that
point, it could have adopted one or another of the arrangements that other
states have; but that option is not available now, although it might be again
at some point in the future.
“Now,” the expert says, “under
conditions of war and when Crimea already will not be part of Ukraine and when
the Donbas is in a state of war, it would be extremely difficult to carry out a
decentralization” of the Ukrainian state or conduct a referendum about how the
Ukrainian state should be organized.
The same thing is true about giving
languages other than Ukrainian special status, he argues. That could and should
have been done earlier and may be done at some future point. But it would be
very difficult to do now. But in the
past, Kyiv refused to allow a discussion of this and indeed came down hard on
anyone who tried to raise the issue.
Even now, the current Ukrainian
president has “repeatedly declared that his humanitarian policy will be
unitary, strict, and nationalist, and that he will not offer any rights to the
Russian language.” Consequently, his promises to do so in the future, just like
his words about decentralization, can be safely ignored as nothing but
propaganda.
It is important to remember,
Bezpalko says, that there are a variety of approaches to decentralization. “Earlier, [President] Poroshenko declared
that he intends to consider the experience of Poland” in this area. But the Moscow expert says that the Polish
“model” doesn’t fit Ukraine’s situation at all.
“Poland is a mono-ethnic state,” Bezpalko continues. “The overwhelming
majority of its population consists of Poles and people who already assimilated
a long tiem ago and also consider themselves Poles.” Its model of
decentralization doesn’t fit Ukraine’s circumstances which are ethnically and
linguistically diverse.
The model Ukraine should consider, he argues, is that of the Russian
Federation with its diverse composition of republics, autonomous oblasts and
autonomous districts. Or Kyiv could make use of the German model in which the
lander have a broad range of rights. Indeed, Bezpalko says, almost any model
but the Polish would be acceptable.
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