Más de 50 polìticos, funcionarios, sobre todo a nivel local y empresarios, cayeron en una densa red de tráfico de influencias y corruptelas, al estilo de la vieja Tangentópolis italiana.El propio Gobierno español a cargo de Rajoy (PP), ha encarado la ofensiva anticorrupción, que incluye la caída de colaboradores y financistas muy cercanos a la elite partidaria, como Granados, que deberán comparecer ante la justicia. Inèdito proceso, que desnuda el costo fiscal que ha tenido la "pacífica" transición democrática española pero también, seguramente, las presiones y condiciones del gobierno alemán (la UE) para que España aplique la receta de la autodepuración si pretende continuidad en el financiamiento externo para el ajuste necesario. Podemos imaginar una ofensiva así en la Argentina democrática, que desnude las "cajas y los cajeros" de la política?
ANALYZING THE WORLD FROM A RUSSOCENTRIC VIEW. This site will be attractive and a motivational experience to those who want to learn the real image of Russia, from its history, millenary culture and its identity discourse. It is relevant that we are in the Southern Cone, where our perceptions are similar to the whole Global South, so far from the Western capitals. MARCELO MONTES
Tuesday, October 28, 2014
BIG CHANGE OF THE UKRAINIAN POLITICAL SYSTEM
Ukraine’s Parliamentary Poll: Results and Reflections
www.reconsideringrussia.org Posted on October 28, 2014
Ukraine concluded a parliamentary election this weekend, electing parties largely with a pro-Western and nationalist platform. Arseniy Yatsenyuk’s People’s Front won first place, edging out his main rival, Petro Poroshenko. In third place came the West Ukraine-based Self-Reliance Party. Fourth place was the pro-Russian Opposition Bloc, which brings together the remnants of Viktor Yanukovych’s old Party of Regions. Then, in the fifth and sixth places respectively were Oleg Lyashko’s Radical Party and Yulia Tymoshenko’s Fatherland Party.
Many in the West have already hailed the election as a “clear victory” for Ukraine’s “European majority.” However, such an assessment is questionable. In fact, it was an election that really did not help to bring Ukraine any closer to unity. The voter turnout in the country illustrated this.
Overall, the national turnout for the election was 52.42%. On a regional level this varied. In the Southeastern oblasti, the turnout was low, with the lowest recorded in the Kiev-controlled sections of the Donetsk and Luhansk oblasti.
Lower voter turnouts were also registered in the far-western oblast of Zakarpattia (Carpathian Rus’) as well as in Chernivsti oblast on the Romanian border. Turnout was low throughout Zakarpattia, home to the Rusyn-speakers and a distinct region in its own right. However, it was lowest in districts on the border with Hungary, inhabited by ethnic Hungarians. Likewise, in Chernvisti, the areas with the lowest voter turnout were those with significant populations of ethnic Romanians.
Not surprisingly, electoral patterns were more divided in the Central oblasti, with an average turnout ranging from 50 to 60%. Of these, Kirovograd oblast registered the lowest turnout. Finally, in the Western oblasti, turnout exceeded 60% and in Lviv oblast, it reached 70%.
It is also interesting to observe which parties managed to win which oblasti in the nationwide election results.
In this regard, Petro Poroshenko managed to carry much of the South and the far-western oblast of Zakarpattia (Carpathian Rus’). His contest with the pro-Western nationalist and current Ukrainian Prime Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk, was most heated in the Central oblasti. Of those Central Ukrainians who participated in the election (about half of the region’s registered voters), most were primarily divided between Poroshenko and Yatsenyuk. With the conclusion of the election, Poroshenko was able to secure three Central oblasti: Chernihiv, Sumy, and his native Vinnitsya. He lost most of the others by as little as a single percentage point.
In addition to securing most of the Central oblasti, Yatsenyuk and his People’s Front secured their greatest victories in much of the Western oblasti, including all of historic Galicia and Volhynia and Yatsenyuk’s native Chernivsti. Yatsenyuk and his party are known for their more hawkish stance toward Russia, which may explain their appeal to many in the Western part of the country.
In fact, Yatsenyuk’s main pet project has been the construction of a large Berlin Wall-style rampart along the entire Russo-Ukrainian border. Yatsenyuk is fully committed to this grandiose and costly scheme, even as Ukraine’s economy spins into bankruptcy. Ironically, in March, it was Yatsenyuk who, in an apparent attempt to channel Ronald Reagan, called for Putin to “tear down this wall.” In response to news about the proposed plan, former Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev stated, “I am against all walls,” adding that “let’s hope that those who are planning such a ‘construction’ come to their senses.”
Finally, the Opposition Bloc managed to secure much of Ukraine’s Eastern oblasti. This included Kharkov, Dnepropetrovsk, Zaporozhia, and the Kiev-controlled areas of Donetsk and Luhansk. Other pro-Russian parties also fared well in the East, including the Communist Party which placed second in Luhansk. The conclusion one may derive from the latter is that, even without the presence of the Donbas rebels, the locals are still largely pro-Russian.
Yet, overall, Ukraine’s new parliament has very little pro-Russian representation. Among other things, the election marks the first time in Ukraine’s entire post-Soviet history that the Communist Party will have no representation. The Opposition Bloc will be the only major pro-Russian force in the Rada.
By contrast, most of the remaining newly-elected parties in parliament are primarily pro-Western and nationalist in character. Though some commentators have been quick to label some of them as “fascist” or “neo-Nazi,” the fact is that their stated ideologies, while fiercely nationalist and hawkishly anti-Russian, are not explicitly fascist.

Ukraine’s far-right Svoboda Party marches in Kiev. The party did not receive enough votes to retain its position in parliament. (Gleb Garanich / Reuters)
Additionally, Ukraine’s two overtly neo-Nazi and fascist parties, Svoboda and Right Sector, garnered only 5% and 2% respectively and thus will not be among the major parties in parliament. This is despite the fact that these two parties played a significant role in the success of the Maidan Revolution.
At the same time, it is important to note that there are some political figures with fascist proclivities and UNA (Ukrainian National Assembly) connections among the “mainstream” nationalist parties. One of them is Andriy Parubiy of Yatsenyuk’s People’s Front. It was Parubiy, together with Oleh Tyahnybok, who founded the original Svoboda (then known as the Social-National Party of Ukraine) in 1991.
Further, the major parties will only occupy half of Ukraine’s parliament. The rest will be representatives from single-mandate districts and these include far-right activists, not just from Svoboda and Right Sector, but from the feared Azov Battalion as well. In fact, Right Sector’s leader, Dmytro Yarosh, even won a single-seat constituency in Dnepropetrovsk. Additionally, Right Sector, Patriots of Ukraine, and other far-right groups still have influence on the streets and certainly in Kiev’s volunteer battalions that have fought in the “anti-terrorist operation” in the Donbas.
Meanwhile, one of Ukraine’s more interesting candidates, the elusive Darth Alekseyevich Vader, also sought political office. A candidate of the Internet Party of Ukraine, Mr. Vader pledged to turn Ukraine into a “galactic empire.” However, the Sith Lord was denied registration for his candidacy after refusing to remove his mask.
Another loser of sorts was Yulia Tymoshenko. The “gas princess” and self-styled Marianne of the Orange Revolution, Tymoshenko’s arrest sparked a cause célèbre in Europe against the Yanukovych regime. How ironic it must seem to otherwise uniformed outsiders that Tymoshenko was barely able to make it into parliament and had to compete against Svoboda (of all parties) to assume that place. However, to Ukrainians who are familiar with Tymoshenko’s role in plundering the country since its independence, such a result was to be expected.
In a twist of fate, Tymoshenko actually placed lower than the formerly marginal Oleg Lyashko, leader of Ukraine’s Radical Party. A flamboyant populist known for instigating brawls in Ukraine’s parliamentary circus, Lyashko has used the Maidan revolution, the Donbas war, and Ukrainian nationalism to advance his political career. His Radical Party is a typical post-Soviet personality-based party, serving as a mere vehicle for his political aims.
The eccentric and controversial politician has advocated for a buildup of nuclear arms in Ukraine and has a laundry list of promises, albeit few explanations on how to deliver on them. He has also become an active participant in the Donbas War, where his actions and abuses have been criticized by the human rights organization Amnesty International among others.
Lyashko’s party, like Yatsenyuk’s and others in Ukraine’s newly elected parliament, also advocates a continuation of the Donbas war. The fact that these “war parties” have been emboldened by their recent election victory will present a serious challenge to President Poroshenko, who will have to forge a coalition with them. The “chocolate king,” as Poroshenko is often known, is in a tough spot, caught between his domestic hawks and pressure from the European Union (especially Germany) and Russia to maintain the ceasefire and find a diplomatic solution to the Donbas conflict. He is in an unenviable position.
In addition, Ukraine is bankrupt and its economy is in total disarray. The newly-elected parliament will soon discover that being pro-Western, nationalist, and anti-Russian is simply not the answer for Ukraine’s mammoth economic problems.
SECULARISM OVER ISLAMISM IN TUNISIA
Tunisia's Ennahda 'faces defeat' in elections |
Secular Nidaa Tounes seen emerging as biggest party in 217-seat parliament, pushing Islamists to second place.
Ahmed El Amraoui AL JAZEERA,Last updated: 28 Oct 2014 04:56
|
Tunisian secular Nidaa Tounes party is emerging as the main winner in the 217-seat parliament election after Sunday's vote, preliminary results show.
Led by Beji Caid Essebsi, Nidaa Tunis has won 83 seats (38 percent), according to official provisional results released on Monday.
The North African nation's leading Islamist party, Ennahda, is in second place with 68 seats (31 percent).
Among the other parties, the provisional figures showed Free Patriotic Union and the Popular Front with 17 seats (seven percent) and 12 seats (five percent) respectively.
Essebsi said on Sunday night that there were "positive indications" Nidaa Tounes was ahead.
Ennahda's head acknowledged late on Monday that his party had finished second.
"#Ennahda president Rachid Ghannouchi congratulates B Sebsi [Beji Caid Essebsi] on his party's win ... a few moments ago," his daughter Soumaya tweeted.
Lotfi Zitoun, a senior Ennahda official, conceded defeat and reiterated the party's call for the formation of a unity government including Ennahda in the interest of the country, regarded as the birthplace of the Arab Spring. "We have accepted this result, and congratulate the winner," Zitoun told Reuters news agency.
Lotfi Zitoun, a senior Ennahda official, conceded defeat and reiterated the party's call for the formation of a unity government including Ennahda in the interest of the country, regarded as the birthplace of the Arab Spring. "We have accepted this result, and congratulate the winner," Zitoun told Reuters news agency.
Setback for Ennahda
The provisional results represent a setback for Ennahda, which had expected to fare much better by betting on its popularity among the poor in many of the country's marginalised communities.
"Governing is not an easy task in those conditions because you don't want to prove powerful when people revolted against that.
"Winning the last elections put us in a very hard exam. With most of our leadership spent years in jails or exile, it was hard to govern."
More orderly time
By voting for Nidaa Tounes, Tunisians appeared to prefer the country's long-established elites over Ennahda, with some hoping for a return of what was a more orderly time before the revolution.
Essebsi served as minister of the interior, defence and foreign affairs under the country's founding president, Habib Bourguiba.
He was then parliamentary speaker under deposed leader Zine El Abidine Ben Ali. His critics accuse him of seeking to restore the regime of Ben Ali, while his supporters say he is the only credible counterweight to Ennahda.
Ideological polarisation had dominated election campaigning, but the Islamist-secular divide will have to be overcome after the full results are published because a coalition government is a certainty.
"Our vision is that if they are elected, we have to govern within a coalition. It is in the benefit of the country to include all the political players," Ennahda's Gaaloul said.
Foreign observers said Sunday's vote was orderly, despite some reports of isolated irregularities.
UCRANIA: SE BUSCA EL CONSENSO
Poroshenko inicia las consultas para formar una gran coalición proeuropea
El partido del presidente de Ucrania está prácticamente igualado con el del primer ministro
PILAR BONET Kiev DIARIO EL PAIS, MADRID27 OCT 2014 - 21:46 CET
El presidente de Ucrania, Petró Poroshenko, no esperó al fin del recuento de los votos en las elecciones anticipadas a la Rada Suprema (el Parlamento estatal) para mantener consultas con sus potenciales socios en una gran coalición proeuropea y prorreforma que saque al país de la crisis.
En los comicios participó el 52,45% del electorado, lo que es una cifra inferior a las elecciones parlamentarias de 2012 y las presidenciales del pasado mayo. La misión de los observadores internacionales de laOrganización para la Seguridad y la Cooperación en Europa (OSCE)consideró que las elecciones cumplían con los criterios democráticos y que se “caracterizaron por muchos aspectos positivos, incluida una comisión electoral central eficiente e imparcial”.
Las autoridades aseguraron el voto en la mayor superficie posible del país, aunque en la provincia de Donetsk se votó en 12 de los 21 distritos electorales y en la de Lugansk en cinco de 11. “La participación de las minorías”, señala el informe preliminar de la OSCE, “se vio afectada por la crisis en el Este y la anexión ilegal de Crimea que hizo difícil organizar las elecciones en estas partes del país donde viven cerca de la mitad de los 14 millones de ciudadanos que se identifican como rusoparlantes nativos así como tártaros de Crimea”. Tanto los rusos como los tártaros son considerados minorías en Ucrania.
El informe señala que “algunos aspectos de la legislación electoral no conducen a la participación o representación de las minorías” y esto ha provocado las quejas de la minoría húngara en Zakarpatia, que exigían una revisión (no obtenida) de las fronteras de los distritos electorales para asegurarse su propio representante en el Parlamento.
Para perfilar la coalición, Poroshenko se reunió con el primer ministro, Arseni Yatseniuk, y luego con el alcalde de Lvov, Andrii Sadovii. Con el el 71% del escrutinio de los sufragios realizado, el Frente Popular, el partido de Yatseniuk, con el 21,82% de los votos, aventajaba ligeramente al partido del presidente, el Bloque de Petró Poroshenko, que registraba un 21,45%.
En tercer lugar iba la Asociación de Autoayuda (11,12%), seguida del Bloque de Oposición, formada por antiguos partidarios del expresidente Víctor Yanukóvich (9,73%), el Partido Radical de Oleg Liashkó (7,39%) y el partido Patria de la ex primera ministra Yulia Timoshenko.
En total, seis partidos pasaban la barrera del 5% para obtener representación, y no siete como pronosticaron las encuestas a pie de urna. El partido ultranacionalista y tradicionalista Libertad no llegaba a ese porcentaje.
La mitad del Parlamento se elige en listas cerradas y el resto por distritos mayoritarios. En uno de ellos el líder del Sector de Derechas, el ultraderechista Dmitri Yárosh, ha conseguido un escaño. En los distritos de las regiones de Donbás (Donetsk y Lugansk) donde se pudo votar han salido elegidos políticos que apoyaron a Yanukóvich, entre ellos varios que votaron a favor de las leyes aprobadas el 16 de enero a mano alzada que restringieron las libertades cívicas y de expresión en plena revuelta del Maidán.
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