Euro 2012 gives a platform to air grievances

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LVIV (Ukraine): Euro 2012 has not stopped political life in Ukraine. Far from it. Instead, football is providing the perfect platform to air a range of local and national grievances in the former Soviet state.

 

The day after Germany’s 1-0 victory over Portugal in the city, it was the  turn of a group of nuns and purists of the Ukrainian language to take to the  streets to demonstrate.
   
On the corner of Rynok square, where the city hall is situated, some 30  women in black habits turn up singing “Halleluja!”, followed some 200 other  people under the midday sun.
 
Some hold banners denouncing the city authorities for “discrimination” for  wanting to “destroy” the holy sisters’ chapel.
 
The nuns’ order belongs to the Ukrainian Orthodox Greek Catholic Church  (UOGCC), which has some 2,000 followers, according to one of the faithful who  has turned up to hear one of its priests speak.
 
“The sisters reconstructed the roof of their chapel but the city  authorities have said that they haven’t put in all the required documents,”  said one of their spokesmen, Viktor Pecheniuk.
 
“We’ve spoken a lot with the mayor but he doesn’t like us,” the 22-year-old  told AFP.
 
A senior official close to mayor Andriy Sadovyy, who asked not to be named,  said: “They’re protesting. They’re free to do so and no one wants them  destroyed     “They took over this building by force and its ownership is claimed by  another religious order. It’s just a conflict of interest.”    In front of the city hall, another of the faithful, Alla Posina, 37,  outlines the UOGCC’s demands: the fight against drugs, euthanasia and 
“freemasons who run everything and support gays” as well as “European laws  favourable to homosexuals”.    The congregation made a single tour of the building’s perimeter then  disappeared.
 
They were soon replaced by an even bigger crowd.
 
Flags belonging to political parties flutter in the wind. Among them is one  belonging to the opposition union, part of the Yulia Tymochenko bloc — named  after the former prime minister who is currently in jail for abuse of power and  corruption.
 
Her supporters claim the case against her was politically motivated. A  number of European leaders agree and have vowed to boycott Euro 2012 matches in  Ukraine as a protest.
 
There is also a banner in English reading “Russification: genocide of  Ukraine” and showing a picture of a young woman with a traditional Ukrainian  hairstyle but with her face behind barbed wire.
 
These people are protesting against a parliamentary bill, proposed by  supporters of Kremlin ally President Viktor Yanukovich, widening the rights for  the official use of Russian, which is spoken in his heartland of eastern  Ukraine.
 
The opposition believes that if such a bill becomes law, it would make  Russian the official second language behind Ukrainian.
 
In a sign of the bill’s sensitivity, a fight broke out between several  dozen deputies in the well of parliament itself when it was presented May 24. 
Some of those involved in the fight ended up in hospital.
 
In front of Lviv city hall on Sunday afternoon, speakers including Irina  Farion, a lawmaker from Svobodam, urged the crowd to “protect the national  language, which is the most important thing in Ukraine”.    “The mayor thinks that we shouldn’t use language to divide but to construct  the country,” the senior municipal government official said. “Now, this law is  dividing the country.
 
“People in the east and the west are different for historical reasons but  we have to learn to respect one another. You come across these things in other  countries, like Canada, Belgium or Spain where linguistic questions are still  key issues.”   -- AFP
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