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Topic: Oleksandr Moroz


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  Paragon -- Editorials 4   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-16)
Moroz told one and all that his goal is not to have the U.S. government and non – governmental organizations cut off aid to Ukraine, but instead to target that aid to channels other than the Ukrainian government.
Moroz said repeatedly that the famed Melnychenko audio tapes, which most people now accept were made in Kuchma’s office, demonstrate the president’s disregard for the Constitution and prove his involvement in a large number of anti — constitutional and criminal acts.
Moroz went to great pains to emphasize that thes opposition was created to uphold and strengthen the Constitution, create new laws based on the Constitution, and protect human rights.
www.iir.kiev.ua /paragon/edi_00sp/moroz.htm   (524 words)

  
  Oleksandr Moroz - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Oleksandr Oleksandrovych Moroz (Ukrainian: Олександр Олександрович Мороз, Russian: Александр Александрович Мороз, born February 29, 1944, in Buda, a town located in the Tarashchansky Raion (district) of the Kiev Oblast) is a Ukrainian statesman and politician.
Moroz was a member of a special board "Forum of national salvation", a representative of a Public Committee of Protection of the Constitution "Ukraine Without Kuchma" (and later "Rise, Ukraine!") in charge of negotiations with representatives of the regime.
Moroz was elected the Chairman of the Verkhovna Rada of Ukraine late on the night of July 6, 2006 (238 ayes, 226 needed for election) with support of the Party of Regions, SPU, and communist factions.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Oleksandr_Moroz   (1047 words)

  
 Oleksandr Moroz - Wikipedia
Oleksandr Moroz werd als boerenzoon geboren in het dorp Boeda in de oblast Kiev.
Moroz is steeds een verklaard tegenstander geweest van president Koetsjma, die aan het bewind was van 1994 tot 2004 en wiens economische hervormingen hij veel te radicaal vond.
Hoewel Moroz in de eerste ronde van de presidentsverkiezingen van 2004 kandidaat was, heeft hij in de tweede ronde de kandidatuur van Joesjtsjenko gesteund.
nl.wikipedia.org /wiki/Oleksandr_Moroz   (521 words)

  
 ISN Security Watch - 'Orange betrayal' in Ukraine
Moroz’s maneuver was so unexpected and destructive to his former allies that certain Ukrainian analysts and politicians tend to see behind this and subsequent developments a conspiracy contrived by powerful political forces, perhaps even foreign ones.
Moroz conceived the constitutional reform mentioned by Tymoshenko back in the 1990s as a means of curbing the ravenous authoritative appetite of then-president Kuchma and conferring real power upon the speaker, himself at the time, and the prime minister.
Moroz's betrayal has substantially shifted the balance of power, as his party has traditionally enjoyed the support of the central provinces, and the present coalition of the clannish-oligarchic PRU with two leftist parties is more than unnatural.
www.isn.ethz.ch /news/sw/details.cfm?ID=16431   (1664 words)

  
 ISN Security Watch - Ukraine opposition divided ahead of elections
Moroz came third in the 1999 elections with 11.29 per cent, and the SPU third in 1998 and fifth in the 2002 elections, with 8.56 per cent and 6.87 per cent, respectively.
Moroz was personally angry with Yushchenko and Tymoshenko for not supporting compromises on constitutional reforms that Moroz ended up backing in parliamentary votes in April and in June.
Moroz's additional support of 8-11 per cent, based on his and the SPU's votes in earlier elections, might have tipped the total past 50 per cent in round one.
www.isn.ethz.ch /securitywatch/details_print.cfm?id=9176   (1187 words)

  
 Ukrainian National News Agency Ukrinform
In this connection Oleksandr Moroz recalled his native village and noted that he views the Famine as genocide.
As is known, on November 17 the parliamentary anti-crisis coalition, which incorporates the Oleksandr Moroz-led Socialist Party, refused to consider the presidential bill, which qualifies the famine as an act of genocide against the people of Ukraine.
Oleksandr Moroz, who met with the officials of Ukraine's region, particularly sensitive to the problem of OUN - URA veterans, promised to objectively consider this delicate issue.
ukrinform.com /eng/order/?id=88362   (316 words)

  
 Урядовий портал :: In German Bundestag leader of Ukrainian Socialists Oleksandr Moroz speaks for ...   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-16)
Leader of Ukrainian socialists Oleksandr Moroz presented a report within the thematic block "The Constitutional reform in the light of requirements to the Constitution: impact on the political system of Ukraine", the Socialist Party of Ukraine press service informed.
Reporter Oleksandr Moroz noted that Ukraine at present is at the beginning of democratic transformations.
Oleksandr Moroz proposed to his German counterparts to conclude an agreement on mutual obligations with regard to job placement for labor migrants, on simplification of conditions for their movement.
www.kmu.gov.ua /control/publish/article?art_id=17341481   (782 words)

  
 Ukraine: Has Socialist Leader Dealt Fatal Blow To Orange Coalition?
Moroz was elected by lawmakers from the Party of Regions and the Communist Party, while his anticipated coalition allies -- the Yuliya Tymoshenko Bloc and Our Ukraine -- shunned the vote.
Moroz was approved as parliamentary speaker with 238 votes exclusively from his party, the Party of Regions, and the Communist Party.
Meanwhile, Moroz explained his election as parliamentary speaker by his intention to heal the west-east division in Ukrainian society deepened by the 2004 Orange Revolution and the 2006 parliamentary elections.
www.globalsecurity.org /wmd/library/news/ukraine/2006/ukraine-060707-rferl01.htm   (1074 words)

  
 [No title]
Oleksandr Moroz, 2006[/b] No doubt, Oleksandr Moroz, leader of the Socialist Party of Ukraine, wins the first place in the top ten treasons in independent Ukraine by rejecting principles, backed by his voters in the parliamentary polls.
Moroz struck a deal with Party of the Regions, which together with the Communists supported him for a parliamentary speaker of Ukraine.
Oleksandr Kotsiuba, 1991[/b] In the last years of the Soviet Union, a lot of representatives of the national-democratic union were elected to the Ukrainian parliament (1990) on the wave of democratization.
eng.imi.org.ua /?id=print&n=2546:&cy=2006&m=   (676 words)

  
 [No title]
Moroz said that the tapes were given to him by an employee of the government Communications Department of the Security Service who has since requested political asylum abroad for both himself and his family.
Moroz added that the officer is ready to testify in court if a trial is opened in connection with the Gongadze case.
Moroz said he is certain of the authenticity of the audio recording he made public to support his claim of Kuchma's complicity in Gongadze's disappearance.
www.infoukes.com /rfe-ukraine/2000/1207.html   (2035 words)

  
 CNN Transcript - CNN Insight: One Dead Man, One Defiant Leader In Ukraine - March 2, 2001
Moroz is an opponent of President Kuchma and the origin of at least some of the tapes that are circulating in Ukraine.
MOROZ (through translator): I have no doubts that law enforcement agents has played certain role in that, and there was a respective conversation in the presidential office where the chief of security service received the clear instructions that the journalist should be murdered.
MOROZ (through translator): The problem is that public opinion has a certain inertia, and as compared to last December when the general public was quite passive, currently it is very, very much active.
transcripts.cnn.com /TRANSCRIPTS/0103/02/i_ins.00.html   (3208 words)

  
 BBC News | Monitoring | Violence, mud-slinging mar Ukraine election campaign
But Socialist Party leader Oleksandr Moroz challenged Kuchma to "open and fair" TV debates, saying the president's power "rests exclusively on total lies in most of the media," the Ukrainian news agency Unian reported.
The Council of Europe concluded that coverage of the campaign "appears to be strongly biased in favour of the outgoing president" and "independent media that express criticism of Kuchma are subjected to numerous pressures by the state authorities," Ukraine's Intelnews agency reported.
The communist-dominated parliament demanded that Moroz be allowed air time on TV to rebut the allegations against him, but the request was turned down.
news.bbc.co.uk /1/hi/world/monitoring/480571.stm   (659 words)

  
 Ukraine: Eight Years after Independence (April 27, 1999) Lecture at the Kennan Institute of the Woodrow Wilson ...
Oleksandr Moroz was in Washington DC from 25-28 April as part of the Kennan Institute's 'Ukraine Policy Briefing Series'.
Moroz, when asked, took some of the blame for this situation on himself, saying that he had foreseen the impossibility of the proposed reforms but was unable to convince others of that fact.
Moroz claims that the cancellation was due to the conference's proximity to parliamentary elections and concerns that opposition parties would gain too much publicity in Ukraine were it to take place.
www.brama.com /news/press/990617moroz.html   (1084 words)

  
 Ukraine's Political Chaos Continues Over Speaker's Spat
It was a surprise win for Socialist party leader Oleksandr Moroz, who had earlier agreed to support a deal in which a member of the Our Ukraine party would be speaker and the Socialists would take the first deputy prime minister's post.
Moroz notes that more compromise may be coming, saying everyone must remember that parliament basically had to be divided in half just to get this far along in the voting of a new government.
Moroz ultimately won the speaker's spot largely because of the support from the Region's party, whose leader, Yanukovych, was quick to try and reach out to form a coalition with Moroz.
www.voanews.com /english/2006-07-07-voa13.cfm   (409 words)

  
 [No title]
Moroz said Ukraine's "law enforcement bodies" will air on statecontrolled television channels a video that alleges his involvement in the 2 October attempt on Vitrenko's life.
Despite his fierce and not always fair criticism of the incumbent, Moroz is seen as a moderate leftist and, in contrast to Symonenko, a likeable one.
In the second round, Moroz might be able to enlist the support of both Symonenko's and parliamentary speaker Oleksandr Tkachenko's electorate--a goal he failed to achieve while campaigning within the socalled Kaniv Four election alliance of Marchuk, Tkachenko, and Volodymyr Oliynyk.
www.infoukes.com /rfe-ukraine/1999/1027.html   (1150 words)

  
 Ukrainian MP Oleksandr Moroz in New York
Moroz is convinced that the crisis will not escalate beyond orderly protests, and that President Kuchma will ultimately be ousted by popular referendum, forced to resign voluntarily, or he will undergo an impeachment process.
Oleksandr Oleksandrovich Moroz is currently Chairman of the Ukrainian Socialist Party (SPU) and Chairman of the Committee on Agrarian Policy and Land, Ukrainian Parliament (Rada).
Moroz was Deputy Head for the Parliamentary Agro-Industrial Commission and was Speaker of the Ukrainian Parliament from 1994 until 1998.
www.brama.com /news/press/010301moroz.html   (640 words)

  
 The Jamestown Foundation
Oleksandr Moroz, who leads the Socialist Party of Ukraine (SPU), is one of the most experienced among Ukraine's current presidential contenders.
Moroz does not reject market reforms outright; he calls instead for the coexistence of various forms of ownership--a stance implying a strong state sector and at least a stop to, if not reversal of privatization.
Moroz is now reportedly being eyed by some of Ukraine's national democrats, who, in the absence of strong market-oriented presidential contenders, see him as a lesser evil compared to more outspoken Reds and even to Kuchma, whom they consider a vehicle of corrupt clans.
www.jamestown.org /publications_details.php?volume_id=22&issue_id=1612&article_id=16194   (738 words)

  
 AMBASSADE D'UKRAINE
As Moroz noted, after the President's veto was overridden on January 12, he has sent the document to the President, which was signed, and if the President doesn't sign it, in ten days the VR Chairman is obliged to publish it with his signature.
As Oleksandr Moroz reminded, he instructed the VR relevant committee to draw conclusions to avoid juridical mistakes and stick to juridical procedure.
Oleksandr Moroz noted the key problem in Ukraine is corruption and stated Ukraine needs aid to fight it off.
www.ukraine.be /news/actualit/a240107.html   (5756 words)

  
 O.Moroz Has Named the Price   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-16)
According to Moroz, it is also necessary to sign an agreement with Viktor Yushchenko about the modes of formation of executive branch structures, “because already you can now see next to Viktor Yushchenko certain people who had nothing to do with his success”.
Moroz informed that the SPU is planning to adopt the strategy of its election campaign in March 2005.
Moroz informed that he has already held talks with 15 MPs who wish to join the SPU faction.
eng.maidanua.org /node/38/print   (447 words)

  
 Ukrainian opposition ends protest - Boston.com
Lawmakers cheer Socialist leader Oleksandr Moroz after he was elected the parliament speaker, in Ukraine's capital Kiev Thursday, July 6, 2006.
That was a blow to President Viktor Yushchenko, who wanted his supporter Poroshenko in the speaker's post as a counterbalance to Yulia Tymoshenko, his sometime ally and the coalition's choice for the next prime minister.
Moroz, who was parliament speaker for years in the 1990s, urged lawmakers to overcome differences and "demonstrate the ability to work as a legislature should."
www.boston.com /news/world/europe/articles/2006/07/06/ukrainian_opposition_ends_protest   (538 words)

  
 Victor Yushchenko and Oleksandr Moroz have signed a Treaty, unifying the democratic forces   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-16)
It is stated in the document that President Yushchenko pledges to withdraw troops from Iraq as soon as possible and to build good relations with the neighboring states, first of all with Russia and the EU, as well as raise the role and the functions of the local government institutions.
Oleksandr Moroz declared that the SPU supports Victor Yushchenko’s candidacy and will call on its voters to vote for Victor Yushchenko in the second round.
Oleksandr Moroz addressed journalists at a briefing that was held after the council and said that he was confident that over 70% of the electorate would vote for Yushchenko in the second round of the elections.
www.yuschenko.com.ua /eng/present/News/1533   (396 words)

  
 AMBASSADE D'UKRAINE
Speaker Oleksandr Moroz is expected to meet with the region leadership, take part in great rally on the occasion of the 15th Anniversary of the Socialistic Party of Ukraine foundation, and participate in a press conference and address the Zhytomyr region local television.
According to Oleksandr Moroz, he strongly advocated passing the bill by the time it was considered at the VR.
Answering questions about his attitude to enlargement of the majority in the Parliament, Oleksandr Moroz said that "no one can suspect deputies, who have joined the majority, of being bribed, they themselves are able to bribe anybody".
www.ukraine.be /news/actualit/a250307.html   (4286 words)

  
 CER | Headless body scandal takes Ukraine toward 'chaos'
On 28 November, Socialist and opposition leader Oleksandr Moroz publicly announced that he had a tape with an allegedly wiretapped recording of conversations involving Ukrainian President Leonid Kuchma, his Chief of Staff Volodymyr Lytvyn and Interior Minister Yuriy Kravchenko in which, among other things, they discussed plans to get rid of the muckraking journalist Gongadze.
Moroz claimed that he received the tape from a Ukrainian security service officer—now abroad—who is ready to testify if the case ends up in court.
Moroz said that his actions were a "political and moral act" and promised there would me more material, including a videotaped testimony of the mysterious officer, presented later.
www.ce-review.org /00/43/didenko43.html   (907 words)

  
 MOROZ THINKS HOW TO GAIN YUSHCHENKO’S LAW / Ukrayinska Pravda
Oleksandr Moroz is convinced the law on the Cabinet of Minister of Ukraine should be signed and officially published by the President.
Moroz, he “once more suggested the President not to participate in the discussions concerning this law” which was accepted according to the Constitution of Ukraine.
Oleksandr Moroz also marked the political reform would be brought to a conclusion despite all contradictions.
www2.pravda.com.ua /en/news/2007/1/26/7017.htm   (366 words)

  
 Build Ukraine
The opposition newspaper Silski Visti has published a political forecast by Socialist Party of Ukraine leader Oleksandr Moroz, in which he considers possible scenarios of political developments in the run-up to the presidential election.
Moroz looked at two possible courses of events: when political reform is carried out and when it is not.
In analysing the political situation that has to do with the presidential elections and all the previous practices of power formation, one can reach a conclusion that the regime's main tool to achieve its aim can only be falsification.
www.artukraine.com /buildukraine/moroz.htm   (1645 words)

  
 Oleksandr Moroz elected Speaker of Ukrainian Parliament - European Forum   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-16)
With 238 votes out of a 450 total, Oleksandr Moroz was elected speaker of the Verkhovna Rada in the night of 6 July.
Moroz, leader of the coalition member Socialist Party, received the support of the oppositionist Party of the Regions and the Communist Party.
The appointment of Oleksandr Moroz as speaker of parliament was initially not expected and could be seen as a blow to President Yushchenko.
www.europeanforum.net /news/202   (284 words)

  
 ABC News: Ukrainian Opposition Ends Protest
Lawmakers cheer Socialist leader Oleksandr Moroz after he was elected the parliament speaker, in Ukraine's capital Kiev Thursday, July 6, 2006.
That was a blow to President Viktor Yushchenko, who wanted his supporter Poroshenko in the speaker's post as a counterbalance to Yulia Tymoshenko, his sometime ally and the coalition's choice for the next prime minister.
Moroz, who was parliament speaker for years in the 1990s, urged lawmakers to overcome differences and "demonstrate the ability to work as a legislature should."
abcnews.go.com /International/wireStory?id=2162514   (405 words)

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