-Caveat Lector-

Joke: It took Capitalism only ten years to do what Communism could not do in
      the last Seventy...That is, to make Communism desirable.

Joshua2
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                 October 29, 1999

                 Natalya Vitrenko: Fiery Neo-Stalinist In Quest For
                 Ukrainian Presidency
                 By Philippe Coumarianos

                 Natalya Vitrenko, a fiery neo-Stalinist and top challenger to
                 Ukraine's leader
                 Leonid Kuchma in next Sunday's presidential poll, is a
                 political phenomenon that
                 inspires both fascination and fear.

                 The only female candidate for the nation's top job, she has
                 won the enthusiastic
                 support of millions of voters in this large ex-Soviet republic
                 with her extreme anti-western views.

                 A fringe politician in 1996, when she split away from the
                 moderate Socialist
                 Party to found a movement she called Progressive Socialists,
                 Vitrenko has gone
                 from strength to strength and is expected to gain 20 some
                 percent of the vote.

                 As such, she has taken center stage in challenging the rule of
                 the center-right
                 Kuchma -- who polls predict will win a second term -- eclipsing
                 the moderate left and other run of the mill Communists.

                 Her agenda is simply radical: halt all economic reforms,
                 break off relations with
                 the IMF, raise wages and pensions, re-nuclearize Ukraine
                 and join a union with
                 Russia and Belarus within "five or ten years."

                 The moon-faced 47-year-old is not in the habit of mincing her
                 words, and no
                 one is safe from her scathing attacks. She accuses the
                 government of being
                 made up of "clans." The Communists, she says, are "puppets."

                 Her thoughts have earned her the hatred of Ukrainian
                 nationalists and the
                 mistrust of foreign investors, western leaders and
                 international financial institutions.

                 "Someone like her would drive Ukraine to the wall," a western
                 diplomat said under cover of anonymity.

                 But her message has touched a chord among a population
                 weary of painful
                 economic reforms and often nostalgic for the Communist
                 stability many remember from the Soviet days.

                 Her party has mushroomed in just three years, growing from
                 820 registered members in 1997 to more than 13,000 today.

                 "I know I threaten the political clans and the crooks who serve
                 them, but people
                 want to live honestly and in peace. That is what I am
                 struggling for," said this
                 born orator, wounded lightly in a grenade attack at a rally in
                 early October.

                 Eight years of post-Communist reforms have become
                 synonymous with
                 suffering and poverty for many Ukrainians, whose average
                 salaries stand at less
                 than 50 dollars a month.

                 "Ukraine is bankrupt. Our foreign debt has climbed to 12.8
                 billion dollars and the
                 reforms have thrown 13 million workers into the street," she
                 charges, accusing
                 the IMF of wanting to turn this nation of 50 million into a
                 "banana republic."

                 A strong feature of her appeal, apart from personal charisma,
                 is Vitrenko's
                 image of incorruptibility -- a reputation which counts a lot
                 in a  country ravaged
                 by corruption and the mafia.

                 The mother-of-three and an economist by training who was
                 elected to
                 parliament in 1994, Vitrenko says she lives in a small
                 apartment in a suburb with
                 her youngest daughter.

                 Cultivating the image of an ordinary woman, she dresses
                 simply and drives a
                 second-hand Hyundai rather than the Mercedes and BMWs
                 favored by other
                 presidential hopefuls. ((c) 1999 Agence France Presse)

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