In Digest, Ukraine

By Radio Free Europe, July 24, 2015

91 years after his death, Lenin remains a frightening image for the extreme-right in Ukraine

91 years after his death, Lenin remains a frightening image for the extreme-right in Ukraine

Ukraine’s Justice Ministry has barred communists from running in upcoming local elections [in October] after the passage of new legislation. Justice Minister Pavlo Petrenko said on July 24 that the Communist Party of Ukraine, the Communist Party of Ukraine’s Workers and Peasants, and the Reformed Communist Party of Ukraine will be barred from the October local elections.

Petrenko also pledged to file a lawsuit to formally ban the parties.

The Communist Party has been an important force in Ukrainian politics, polling 13 percent in the 2012 parliamentary elections, but its popularity plummeted following its support for pro-Russian ex-President Viktor Yanukovych, who was toppled by pro-European protests last year and is currently residing in Russia.

Pavlo Petrenko, Minister of Justice and chief witchhunter of Ukraine

Pavlo Petrenko, Minister of Justice and chief witchhunter of Ukraine

In the Oct. 26, 2014 parliamentary elections, the Communist Party of Ukraine garnered less than four percent of the vote.

In 2000, the Communist Party of Ukraine split and two new communist parties were formed — the Reformed Communist Party of Ukraine (also known as the Communist Party of Ukraine Renewed) and the Ukrainian Communist Party of Workers and Peasants. The two new communist parties did not take part in parliamentary elections in 2012 and 2014.

Ukraine passed several laws in April banning the use of symbols from the Soviet era and denouncing communist ideology. Under those laws, the communist government that ruled between 1917 and 1991 — the Soviet era — was condemned as a criminal regime that conducted policies of state terror.

Its symbols and propaganda were banned — a measure that, if implemented thoroughly, would require the demolition of remaining monuments to Bolshevik Revolution leader Vladimir Lenin and other Soviet-era images.

Also in April, Ukrainian lawmakers adopted a law that defined the legal status and honored the memory of participants in the struggle for Ukraine’s independence in the 20th century, including groups that fought against Nazi Germany and Soviet authorities.

Communist Party of Ukraine leader Petro Symonenko said on July 24 that his party planned to take part in the election despite the ministry’s decision.

The leader of the Russian Communist Party, Gennady Zyuganov, called the decision “pure arbitrariness and a reprisal against their political opponents.”

Based on reporting by AP, UNIAN, Interfax, TASS and pravda.ua

Read also:
OSCE slams Ukraine over ‘decommunization’ law, RT.com, May 18, 2015

Dossier: Poroshenko approves law ‘banning’ communist symbols, equating WW2 Nazi collaboration with Ukrainian independence, on New Cold War.org, May 16, 2015

Scholars urge Poroshenko not to sign anti-communist witch hunt law, statement republished in New Cold War.org, April 27, 2015

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