Ukraine leader sees end to war, eyes EU membership by 2020
KIEV, Ukraine (AFP) — President Petro Poroshenko yesterday proclaimed an end to the “most dangerous” part of Ukraine’s pro-Russian uprising and the start of a post-war recovery that would lead to an EU membership bid in 2020.
But the upbeat message was clouded by new deadly clashes and a defiant decision by guerrillas to hold independent elections on November 2 that Poroshenko said he hoped Russia would not recognise.
The pro-Western leader told the first press conference since his June inauguration that he would never allow a resurgent Kremlin and gunmen entrenched in Ukraine’s eastern rust belt to halt Kiev’s ambition to break out of Russia’s embrace.
“We suffered for too long in the socialist camp to let someone lower an iron curtain across our western border,” Poroshenko said in reference to Ukraine’s Soviet past.
The five-month conflict has killed more than 3,200 people and driven 650,000 from their homes across a bomb-scarred region that once served as the country’s economic driving engine.
Poroshenko showed he was determined to continue on a Westward path as he unveiled a comprehensive package of social and economic reforms, dubbed Strategy 2020, which he said “will prepare Ukraine to apply for membership in the European Union in six years”.
The plunge in relations between Moscow and Kiev came after the February ouster of a Moscow-backed leader, followed by the Kremlin’s annexation of Crimea and its alleged backing of a bloody pro-Russian revolt.
An unexpected militia counter-offensive at the end of last month was only halted when Poroshenko agreed to a truce the Kremlin helped partially draft.
The plan called for rebel-held regions to hold local council elections on December 7 to help restore law and order.
But separatist leaders soon objected because it gave them only limited self-rule for three years. They now plan to form their own “Supreme Soviet” parliament and elect a formal government.
“I hope that neither Russia nor the rest of the world recognise elections called by self-proclaimed terrorist organisations in violation of Ukrainian law,” Poroshenko said.
Poroshenko’s revival programme includes 60 proposals to improve his country’s chances of European Union membership — a bid the wealthier European nations currently view with mistrust.
The proposals include efforts to tackle rampant corruption and reform the country’s bribe-infested justice system.
Poroshenko also promised to gain “energy independence” — a reference to Ukraine’s heavy reliance on Russian natural gas. A politically-charged energy price dispute saw Russia cut off Ukraine’s gas taps on June 16.
The row, along with the escalating costs of war and the shutdown of giant industries in the east, have only accelerated Ukraine’s economic implosion.
Growth is expected to slow by seven to 10 per cent this year and put still more pressure on Poroshenko ahead of parliamentary polls on October 26.
Poroshenko has responded to charges of weakness in the face of Russia by announcing plans to seek NATO membership — a step the Kremlin views as a direct national security threat.
The president reaffirmed his intentions by tweeting that he had just “instructed the cabinet minister to revoke Ukraine’s non-aligned (nation) status”.