Archive for the ‘Ukraine’ Category

Ukraine Separatists Declare New ‘State’ Called Malorossiya

Ukraine separatists who are Russian-backed rebels fighting against Kiev announced on Tuesday the creation of a new "state" called Malorossiya to take the place of Ukraine and have its capital in their territory.

The proposed country -- which Agence France-Presse says in this report has no chance of getting off the ground -- would be founded after a referendum and given a tsarist-era name meaning "Little Russia" that once described most of the area covering modern-day Ukraine.

A constitution presented by rebel leader Alexander Zakharchenko said representatives from the insurgents' self-declared Donetsk and Lugansk "People's Republics" and other regions had agreed to "declare the establishment of a new state, which is the successor of Ukraine."

The document -- released by the separatists' news agency -- said rebel bastion Donetsk would become the capital, while Kiev would be reduced to the status of a "historical and cultural centre."

The surprise proposal is likely to draw scorn from Ukraine's pro-Western authorities in Kiev, who have been locked in a conflict with the Moscow-supported rebels since 2014 that has cost the lives of some 10,000 people.

It was not immediately clear why the rebels decided to put forward the new plan, but it is likely a gambit aimed at pushing forward their case in a stalled peace process.

A peace deal brokered by the leaders of Ukraine, Russia, France and Germany in 2015 has hit a wall as clashes drag on along the volatile frontline.

The latest move by the rebels could throw the troubled plan even further into doubt.

It echoed language used by Moscow in the early days of the conflict that promoted fears Russia was looking to annex swathes of mainland Ukraine after its seizure of the Crimea peninsula.

The Kremlin used the tsarist-era name "Novorossiya" (New Russia) to refer to the areas the rebels had seized, but the term was later dropped.

Ukraine and the West insist that Moscow has funneled troops and arms across the border to fan the flames of the war in Europe's backyard.

Moscow has denied the allegations despite overwhelming evidence that it has been involved in the fighting and its explicit political support for the rebels.

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Ukraine Separatists Declare New 'State' Called Malorossiya

Five Ukraine troops die in fierce clash with Donetsk rebels – BBC News


BBC News
Five Ukraine troops die in fierce clash with Donetsk rebels
BBC News
The Ukrainian military says five of its soldiers died in heavy rebel shelling of Ukrainian army positions at Avdiivka just north of rebel-held Donetsk. Three Ukrainian troops died earlier when a mine blew up, the military said. The US Department of ...
Clashes kill six Ukraine soldiers in spike of violenceAljazeera.com
9 Ukrainian soldiers killed in bloodiest day of fighting in 2017Business Insider
US condemns deadliest day of violence in Ukraine this yearABC News
The National Interest Online -RadioFreeEurope/RadioLiberty -Yahoo Singapore News
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Five Ukraine troops die in fierce clash with Donetsk rebels - BBC News

Ukraine Bans Auditor PricewaterhouseCoopers – Wall Street Journal (subscription)


Wall Street Journal (subscription)
Ukraine Bans Auditor PricewaterhouseCoopers
Wall Street Journal (subscription)
Ukraine's central bank has banned PricewaterhouseCoopers from conducting bank audits in the country after finding PrivatBank, the country's top lender, developed a more-than-$5-billion hole in its books while under the accounting firm's supervision.

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Ukraine Bans Auditor PricewaterhouseCoopers - Wall Street Journal (subscription)

A Miserable 2017 for PriceWaterhouseCoopers Just Got Worse – Fortune

Accounting firm PwC has had a 2017 to forgetbut it just got even worse.

First there was the embarrassing gaffe at this year's Oscar's ceremony, which led to the wrong winner being announced for the Best Picture award, the climax of the evening.

But in business and reputation terms, much worse has followed that. In March, it settled with the administrators of collapsed investment firm MF Global , which had been suing PwC for $3 billion in damages from what it claimed was poor accounting.

Then in June, the U.K.'s Financial Reporting Council started an investigation into its audits of telecom company's BT plc's operations in Italy . BT has taken a charge of nearly $700 million against the unit, which was raided in May by Italian police on suspicion of fraud.

Read : PwC Is Keeping Its Job Handing Out the Oscars Envelopes

Now, it's being tarred and feathered by Ukraine due to its auditing of the country's second-largest bank, PrivatBank, which collapsed last year. The collapse necessitated a multi-billion dollar bailout, indirectly funded by the International Monetary Fund.

The National Bank of Ukraine, the country's central bank, said late Thursday it had revoked the license of PwC to audit local banks, saying that it had verified "misrepresented financial information in the financial statements" of Privat.

PwC, which had audited the bank for over a decade, said it was "very disappointed" by the decision.

"We do not believe that the reasons given by the NBU justify its decision," the firm said in an e-mailed statement, adding that it will "examine all options for reversing this decision."

Read : Ukraine Blames Russian Security Services for Recent Cyber Attack

The NBU's action catches PwC squarely in the middle of a battle for control of the country and its economy, one that has been fought out between various governments and an often shadowy business elite over a quarter of a century.

Last month, the Ukrainian government had said it could need up to another $1.5 billion to fill the holes in Privat's balance sheet, created by bad loans made to its owners and their associates. That's on top of a $4.2 billion capital shortfall disclosed in the bank's 2016 report.

Any losses that can't be recovered from the bank's borrowers will have to be covered, ultimately, out of a $17.5 billion IMF loan package, to be repaid, ultimately, by taxpayers.

Ukraine's bailout was agreed to in haste after Russia's invasion of Crimea and eastern Ukraine in 2014 finally exposed the fragility of an economy and financial system run through with corruption. Its currency, the hryvnia, has lost over two-thirds of its value against the dollar since 2014, further exacerbating poverty in what was already one of the poorest countries in Europe.

The IMF had insisted on an exhaustive clean-up of the banking system as a condition for the loan. Many had doubted it would enforce those conditions thoroughly, given that the U.S. and EU, whose governments effectively control IMF policy, wanted to stop the country being broken up by Vladimir Putin's Russia. But the NBU took to the task with relish, closing over 80 institutions thatin realitywere little more than piggy-banks for their owners.

Read : Trump: I Wouldnt Have Appointed Sessions If Id Known About Russia Recusal

The NBU taking Privat into special administration at the end of 2016 was widely seen as the strongest proof to date of its seriousness. Privat was not only the biggest locally-owned bank, with over 20% of all retail deposits in the country and processing more than 60% of its electronic transfers. It was also backed by the man widely seen as the most powerful of all the oligarchs in the anti-Russian west of the country, Ihor Kolomoysky.

Kolomoysky had been politically untouchable for years, and it was he who bankrolled the militias that stopped the advance of Russian-backed rebels through eastern Ukraine in 2014. But the IMF's pressure meant that President Petro Poroshenko was forced to sacrifice a relationship that had previously worked to his advantage. That led to him firing Kolomoysky from his position as a regional governor and ejecting his managers from notionally state-controlled companies like pipeline operator Ukrtransnafta .

Kolomoysky and his partner Hennady Boholyubov have repeatedly denied the NBU's claims. More recently, they have sued the government and the NBU in a Kiev court to have themselves reinstated as owners of the bank, claiming that the NBU's seizure was unnecessary and unlawful. Their case was somewhat weakened when the government, in reaction, leaked a letter to Prime Minister Volodymyr Groysman, at the end of 2016, admitting that the bank could not carry on operating without state support, urging the government to take it over and promising not to interfere with its future management.

Kateryna Rozhkova, the NBU deputy governor who has presided over the crackdown, isn't letting things rest yet. In a statement on the Privat case e-mailed to Fortune , she said that: "There will also be a thorough investigation whether criminal offenses have been committed. If they have, those responsible must be brought to justice.

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A Miserable 2017 for PriceWaterhouseCoopers Just Got Worse - Fortune

Ukraine conflict – Press TV

This file photo taken on April 06, 2015 shows a man collecting debris on the roof of burned house after shelling in the eastern Ukrainian city of Donetsk. (Photo by AFP)

These are the headlines we are tracking for you in this episode of On the News Line:

Ukraine conflict

Ukraines eastern regions have been the scene of deadly clashes between pro-Russian forces and Kiev troops since November 2014. The violence erupted in the wake of political developments in the country which led to the rise of a western-backed government at the expense of a pro-Russia one. Now a surprise announcement by the pro-Russian leader of self-proclaimed Donetsk Peoples Republic in Ukraines east has cast cloud on prospects of resolving the crisis amicably. He declared the creation of a new 'state' called Malorossiya.

Stop the interference

New tensions between the US and VenezuelaVenezuelan defense minister has condemned what he calls "gross interference" in the countrys internal affairs after reports said Washington is readying fresh sanctions against Caracas. The United States is preparing sanctions against several senior Venezuelan government figures including defense chief Vladmiri Padrino Lopez. This is part of the Trump administrations efforts to ratchet up pressure on Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro amid a continued crisis in the Latin American nation. Venezuela considers the US actions as a violation of its sovereignty.

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Ukraine conflict - Press TV