Go Euro or go Putin: MH17 deepens Ukrainian divide
Even most mild-mannered Ukrainians, known for their long-suffering tolerance born of a history of occupation and conflict, have turned against their neighbours in Russia – if not all, then one in particular: Russian President Vladimir Putin.
“Putin should understand that it’s enough already. This is not a conflict between Ukraine and Russia. It is an international conflict,” Ukraine’s usually quietly spoken prime minister, Arseny Yatseniuk, told a news conference. “Russia is on the dark side, on the side of the devil.”
For many Russians, the feeling is mutual – but directed at the Ukrainians. Since the street protests in Kyiv that ousted a pro-Russian president in February, Russia has branded Ukraine’s new rulers as fascists. It now says Kyiv is being run by US leaders bent on bringing Russia to its knees.
Marriages between Ukrainians and Russians have become tense, families divided, and one couple on the verge of marriage called it off after arguing whether Putin was in the wrong or the right, acquaintances said.
MH17 Factor
Kyiv says it has “conclusive evidence” that Russia supplied rebels with the BUK-M1, or SA-11 radar guided missile launcher, and the crew that shot down the Malaysian airliner on July 17, killing all 298 people on board. Russia denies arming the rebels, and its Defence Ministry has challenged Washington to produce any evidence that a missile was fired at the airliner. The Ministry also says that a Ukrainian fighter had been tailing the aircraft.
Whether it’s proved one way or the other, the damage between what Putin has called these two “brother” nations has been done. Any dream of keeping what remains of Ukraine – seen by many Russians as the cradle of their civilisation – in Russia’s sphere of influence has been shattered. Putin’s annexation of Ukraine’s Crimea and allegations that he’s stirring the rebellion in its eastern regions have already sharpened the desire among many Ukrainians to integrate more closely with the West.
When bodies and debris started falling out of the sky on July 17, turning the fields into a grisly graveyard, even some of the doubters began to see merit in leaning more to Europe. “He doesn’t want us to go to Europe,” says Tetiana, refusing to use her surname or Putin’s name. “Well, we will go there.”
It’s a feeling shared by many in Ukraine, if not in its east, though even there some of the support for pro-Russian rebels wanting to carve out an independent Donbass republic has faded. “It’s obvious it’s Russian weapons. I cannot blame the people, but it’s clear that one stupid guy, one stupid hand, killed almost 300 people,” says Oleksiy Yaroshevych, a consultant on the environment, referring to Putin.
Outside the Dutch embassy in Kyiv, where Ukrainians laid flowers to remember the dead, including 80 children, Yaroshevych says he was ashamed it had happened in Ukraine. “Maybe this horrible story will help focus the people of Europe to understand that we should do something together against Russia,” he says.
A Country Divided
Ukrainian Foreign Minister Pavlo Klymkin concurs, saying Kyiv could count on Europe’s solidarity but little more. “I sometimes say… in Europe they have looked at us as if through a window,” he told Ukraine’s Inter television. “And now the terrorists have thrown the stone.”
They may have also sharpened the sense for some of what it is to be Ukrainian. Whether fuelled by attachment to the past or an urge for a different future, the violence of the last few months has concentrated many minds on what distinguishes Ukrainians not just from Russia but also from the rest of Europe. Since the fall of the Soviet Union over 20 years ago, Ukraine has struggled to form its identity, making it easy for bigger powers to deepen the divide within the country, split between the Ukrainian-speaking west and Russian-speaking south-east.
The country’s first and second presidents after independence took pride in holding Ukraine together, acknowledging the pressures on a country that has a 1,000-year history as a state, but has long been carved up by its neighbours for centuries.
In Cherkasy, central Ukraine, local activists have taken up painting to offer children, and some adults, traditional Ukrainian murals to compete with the usual global fare of Spiderman and Superman. Cossacks, with their trademark lock of hair, baggy trousers and peasant shirts, take pride of place alongside stylised women with garlands of ribbons and flowers in their hair. Benches are painted yellow and blue, the colour of the Ukrainian flag. One house is even split into the two colours.
But there’s a long road to travel. On day two at the wedding in Ukraine’s Odessa, known for its mix of Russians and Ukrainians, Arabs and Armenians, Georgians and Bulgarians, Jews and Tatars, the conversation returns to politics. “Well, there’s not a single Russian soldier here, and they still blame Putin,” says the mother of the groom.
It’s not a version of events that the Ukrainian government and its Western allies accept, but the other guests let it go, for the sake of the newlyweds. — Reuters