martes, 30 de octubre de 2012

THE NEWS TODAY


Observers slam Ukraine poll as ruling party nears victory

 Ukraine's ruling party was set Monday to beat the allies of jailed ex-premier Yulia Tymoshenko in legislative elections that observers condemned as a setback for the ex-Soviet state's nascent democracy. Prime Minister Mykola Azarov predicted that the Regions Party had won an

outright majority in Sunday's ballot following a disappointing performance by another opposition group led by world heavyweight boxer Vitaly Klitschko. "We expect these results to hold," Azarov told reporters. "This means that the Regions Party has scored a resounding victory.

"We are expecting that the Regions Party will take the majority in the new parliament." But observers from the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) issued an unusually strong statement describing the election process as a step backwards for Ukraine.

"Considering the abuse of power, and the excessive role of money in this election, democratic progress appears to have reversed in Ukraine," said OSCE special co-ordinator Walburga Habsburg Douglas. "One should not have to visit a prison to hear from leading political figures in the country."

Ukraine's 2010 presidential election - which saw Viktor Yanukovych defeat Tymoshenko amid disappointment over the fruits of the 2004 Orange Revolution popular uprising - had been hailed by observers as the cleanest ever in the ex-Soviet Union. "Certain aspects of the pre-election period constituted a step backwards compared with recent national elections," the OSCE report said.

The Ukrainian foreign ministry quickly issued a statement in which it vowed to "carefully analyse" the observers' criticisms and "improve the election legislation and practice." The criticism by the OSCE is all the more bitter for Ukraine as it is due to take the chairmanship of the body in 2013.

Official results gave Yanukovych's Regions Party 33.2 percent of the vote against 23.2 percent for Tymoshenko's opposition party with 73 percent of precincts reporting in the proportional system that will determine half the seats in the new chamber. The ruling party was also on course to win at least 114 seats out of the 225 that are being determined by first-past-the-post single mandate constituencies.

Tymoshenko's party said it had conducted a parallel count which showed the Regions Party leading her faction by a much narrower margin of just over four percent - an outcome which had also been predicted by exit polls.

The ex-premier then announced she was launching a hunger strike from inside the state hospital where she was moved this summer from jail to receive treatment for a debilitating back condition. "These elections were falsified from start to finish," Tymoshenko said in a statement read by her lawyer Sergiy Vlasenko. Regions parliamentary faction leader Olexander Efremov said he expected to control 230 seats in the 450-seat Verkhovna Rada house of parliament.

"The Regions Party will have a majority either on its own or with help from MPs from the single mandate constituencies," said Mykhailo Pogrebynsky of the Kiev institute of political research. "This is the first time in Ukraine's history that the ruling party has won the legislative elections," he added.

The final turnout was robust at 58 percent. The Communists were polling strongly in third place with 14.5 percent. Klitschko's new UDAR (Punch) party was on 13.2 percent - a disappointment given some pre-election opinion polls had placed it in second place. The ultra-nationalist Svoboda (Freedom) party was also due to break the five-percent threshold needed to make parliament and was polling 9.0 percent. 

Breakup of Yugoslavia


Though the 1974 Constitution reduced the power of the federal government, Tito's authority substituted for this weakness until his death in 1980.
After Tito's death on 4 May 1980, ethnic tensions grew in Yugoslavia. The legacy of the Constitution of 1974 was used to throw the system of decision-making into a state of paralysis, made all the more hopeless as the conflict of interests had become irreconcilable
This created a breakup into many states.



And this is how it is today:



Yugoslavia


Yugoslavia was a country in the western part of the Balkans during most of the 20th century. 



The Kingdom of Yugoslavia which before 3 October 1929 was known as the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes 
was established on 1 December 1918 by the union of the State of Slovenes, Croats and Serbs and the Kingdom of Serbia.


The Kingdom of Yugoslavia was invaded by the Axis powers in 1941, and because of the events that followed, was officially abolished in 1943 and 1945.
On 31 January 1946, the new constitution of Federal People's Republic of Yugoslavia, modeled after the Soviet Union, established six republics, an autonomous province, and an autonomous district that were part of SR Serbia. The federal capital was Belgrade



  1. Socialist republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina, with capital in Sarajevo,
  2. Socialist republic of Croatia, with capital in Zagreb,
  3. Socialist republic of Macedonia, with capital in Skopje,
  4. Socialist republic of Montenegro, with capital in Titograd,
  5. Socialist republic of Serbia, with capital in Belgrade, which also contained:
    5a. Socialist autonomous province of Kosovo, with capital in Priština
    5b. Socialist autonomous province of Vojvodina, with capital in Novi Sad
  6. Socialist republic of Slovenia, with capital in Ljubljana.



Here you will find part of the trip that Francis Tapon did to Eastern Europe, also you are allowed to buy the e-book by clicking here.

jueves, 25 de octubre de 2012

Easter Europe

Eastern Europe is what today we consider as Europe. 


The question now is, What countries are part of Eastern Europe? Its pretty hard to find a group of people that can agree in where the line that separates Eastern and Western Europe is. 

Back in the year of 1947 it was easy to tell what Eastern Europe was made up of all contries that were on the "wrong" side of the Iron Curtain. Eastern Europe had those backward, communist countries which were frozen in the Stone Age.

Here we can see that Albania, Yugoslavia, Bulgaria, Romania, Hungary, Czechoslovakia, East Germany, Poland ans Soviet Union were part of the Eastern Europe.