Civil war in Ukraine

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pmaitra

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Poroshenko Blames Kiev Grenade Deaths on...Wait for It...Russia!
In an interview with Sky News, Ukraine's Petro Poroshenko accuses Russia of extending its “campaign of destabilisation”

Sam Kiley | (Sky News) | Russia Insider


Well we didn't think he'd blame Petro Poroshenko

Ukraine's president has laid the blame for the murder of three policemen during a right wing demonstration on Monday firmly at the doors of the Kremlin, accusing Russia of extending its “campaign of destabilisation.

Three people died after grenades were thrown during clashes between nationalists and police outside Ukraine's parliament.

It followed a vote to give more powers to the regions, including separatist regions in the east.

Petro Poroshenko, a billionaire businessman who was elected in May last year at the height of a Russian campaign to seize the Crimea and back rebels in the east of Ukraine, told Sky News the killings were inspired by Moscow.

In an exclusive and wide-ranging interview, he insisted that his reform programme to bring his country closer to European Union norms and requirements was on track, notably tackling corruption and the planned lifting of immunity for politicians - including himself.

Part of his business empire was built on confectionery - as a result he is known as the “chocolate king”.

But it is the tsar-like leadership of Vladimir Putin that he says is a threat not only to his country but to wider European and global security - pointing out that even the UK regularly has Russian military aircraft testing its air space.

He said that Russia had become “unpredictable” but he did not feel vulnerable, even though “this is one of the most difficult presidencies in the whole world”.

His claim that Russia may have been behind the grenade attack on the police will gain credence among conspiracy theorists and some military theorists. Moscow has pioneered what is now known as “hybrid warfare” – the use of covert operators to foment instability.

Ukraine's president said he was proud of his country's ability to hold back the Russians and rebels given that a year ago he was told that “half your army is corrupt and the other 50% are Russian agents” by NATO and other western supporters who have now begun training his forces.

Mr Poroshenko was adamant that he would also bring reforms to the country's notoriously corrupt economy, insisting that constitutional reforms lifting immunity from parliamentarians and the judiciary would be driven on - even in the face of the very politicians who may soon come under investigation by newly foreign trained anti-corruption detectives.

“War is not an excuse to stop reforms,” he said.

His hopes are most pinned on a ceasefire agreement that was signed many months ago but has only seen respect in the last six days, with no serious casualties reported from the front line.

“The only reason that the Russians came to Minsk and are prepared to negotiate at all was as a result of economic sanctions imposed by the outside world,” he said, insisting that Ukraine did not need troops but it would continue to need the support of the international community.

He is forging ahead with plans to move yet further away from the Kremlin's influence and closer to the European Union – precisely the policy that has so angered Vladimir Putin, the Russian president. So it is hard to see an end to Ukraine's conflict any time soon.
_______________________________________________________________________

Commentary:

Why did the chocolate seller blame Russia? Surely, he is not stupid, because, if that were so, he could not have made a fortune selling chocolates. Looks like he said what he said fearing a grenade coming his way.
 

pmaitra

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Garry Kasparov Plays Bold 'Russia Is Destroying Middle East' Gambit, Gets Crushed by Reality
Former chess champ now a certified blowhard


Riley Waggaman | Russia Insider


Poorly played.

Former World Chess Champion and current Anne Applebaum co-conspiratorGarry Kasparov played an ambitious but theoretically unsound gambit during an appearance on Fox News last night.

Kasparaov opened with the standard 1. e4 e5 2. nc3 nf6, but then shocked television viewers around the world with 3. “Putin has a very good chance of turning [the] Middle East ablaze” (?!), losing control of the center and also his mind. In doing so, Mr. Kasparov exposed himself to the obvious and winning reply, “Have you picked up a newspaper or turned on a television in the last 15 years, Garry?” but Fox News, which has an ELO rating of -2,000, responded instead with 3. …a nod of approval (?!), leaving chess commentators as well as ordinary people both confused and agitated.

One could simply point to Russia's (mostly) successful efforts to prevent the U.S. from drone-bombing Syria into the Stone Age, or its major contributions to the recent nuclear deal with Iran, or the fact that Russia has not been bombing/invading/torturing the Middle East for the last 15 years (unlike a certain so-and-so), but Garry Kasparov is not to be reasoned with. What happened, exactly?

Once known for his cunning attacks and superhuman calculation, Kasparov now struggles to form coherent sentences. He regularly torments op-ed pages with statements such as ”fascism has come to Russia”, and uses television appearances to compare Putin to Adolf Hitler.

We can only speculate why Kasparov has chosen this extremely risky line. Most likely his neo-conservative handlers have promised him the title of Democratic King of Russia once Putin is finally forced into exile due to his 3% unapproval rating. In the meantime, Kasparov continues to blunder away the last miserly scraps of respect that rational people once had for him.

Why can't Garry stick to what he's good at, like accusing IBM of plotting shadowy conspiracies? Come back to reality, Garry. We miss you.

 

pmaitra

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BREAKING: IMF Officials Helped Steal Ukraine Funds - US Investigating
  • Highly unusual for US Department of Justice to be investigating a pro-western oligarch like Igor Kolomoisky
  • But apparently his PrivatBank hiding $1.8 billion of IMF funds was too much even for Washington
  • Now it appears, the bank had help from IMF officials who are running for cover and refusing to answer questions
John Helmer | (Dances with Bears) | Russia Insider


As long as it's not too open

Officials of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) are in flight from evidence of negligence, incompetence, and corruption in their management of billions of dollars in loans for Ukraine.

Nikolai Gueorguiev, head of the Ukraine team at IMF headquarters in Washington, DC, and Jerome Vacher, the IMF representative in Kiev, refuse to respond to questions on their role in the offshore diversion of IMF loan money through Privatbank and Credit Dnepr Bank, banks owned by Ukrainian oligarchs Igor Kolomoisky and Victor Pinchuk. The Fund’s Managing Director Christine Lagarde (lead image, front) and her spokesman, Gerry Rice (rear), are covering up evidence of conflicts of interest and multiple violations of the IMF Staff Code of Conduct which have been occurring in the Ukraine loan programme. Simonetta Nardin, head of the Fund’s media relations, refuses to explain her apparent violations of the Code, or respond to evidence that she fabricated elements of her career resume.

On Tuesday a spokesman at the US Department of Justice in Washington confirmed that an investigation is under way of the role played by US clearing banks in the movement of IMF funds through the Privatbank group and companies connected with Kolomoisky. Speaking for the Asset Forefeiture and Money Laundering Section, Peter Carr declined to give more details.

In recent indictments presented to US courts, Justice Department officials have defined the crime of money laundering as the transmission or transfer of money through “a place in the United States to or through a place outside the United States” with the “intent to promote the carrying on of specified unlawful activity”; with knowledge that the transfer of funds represents “the proceeds of some unlawful activity”; and with the intention to “conceal or disguise the nature, the location, the source, the ownership, or the control of the proceeds of unspecified unlawful activity”.

The role of US system banks, such as Citibank, Bank of America, and JPMorgan Chase, in clearing US dollar transactions has been the basis of selective Justice Department prosecutions of Russian and pro-Russian Ukrainian companies and individuals since the toppling of President Victor Yanukovich in Kiev in February 2014. In contrast, Ukrainian allies of the US in that operation, including Yulia Tymoshenko (below, left), Kolomoisky (centre), and Pinchuk (right), have not been pursued on court evidence of their involvement in corruption and money-laundering.



Washington’s selectivity and political favouritism was condemned by an Austrian court in May, when a US extradition request for Dmitry Firtash on corruption charges was rejected. Justice Department lawyers are now attempting a retrial of their allegations in an appeals court in Vienna.

For the Justice Department to acknowledge this week that it is investigating Kolomoisky is unusual. Kolomoisky himself was last recorded as visiting the US in April; follow that story here. He is based in Geneva, where a Swiss Government investigation of his qualification for renewal of a residency permit continues withoutend.

For the US to acknowledge opening an investigation of IMF lending to Ukraine is unprecedented. The IMF resumed its loan disbursements to Ukraine in March. This was after a hiatus of six months from October of 2014, when the Stand-By Arrangement (SBA) agreed the previous April was suspended as Fund officials attempted to convince the board that the Kiev government was capable of repaying its debts and meeting its loan conditions. When the Fund launched the SBA on April 30, 2014, it had claimed: “A strong and comprehensive structural reform package is critical to reduce corruption…to build capacity to more effectively conduct enforcement of anti-money laundering and anti-corruption legislation.”

The IMF reports that in 2014 it gave $2.2 billion to the National Bank of Ukraine (NBU) before the suspension. Another $5.4 billion in IMF cash was paid to Kiev for what is called “budget support”. That also included warfighting in eastern Ukraine.

When the IMF board agreed to restart lending with a new arrangement called the Extended Fund Facility (EFF), the American deputy managing director of the Fund, David Lipton, claimed: “Restoring a sound banking system is key for economic recovery. To this end, the strategy to strengthen banks through recapitalization, reduction of related-party lending, and resolution of impaired assets should be implemented decisively.” Using the future tense Lipton (below, left) was acknowledging that next to nothing had been done to reform the Ukrainian banks in fifteen months.



Gueorguiev (right), an ex-official of the Bulgarian government, has claimed he is in charge of the independent auditing and supervision of the Ukrainian banks; for the record of his admissions in June 2014, click. Since then Gueorguiev refuses to answer questions.

In the new staff report for which he and Jerome Vacher, the IMF resident representative in Kiev, are responsible, issued a month ago, they admitted the condition of the Ukrainian banks is parlous. “Outstanding NBU loans are still elevated for a number of domestic banks. At end-June, the aggregate liquidity ratio among the 35 largest banks was 15.2 percent, although seven of these domestic privately-owned banks had liquidity ratios below 5 percent.” Privat and Credit Dnepr, the Kolomoisky and Pinchuk pocket banks, aren’t identified.

Gueorguiev omits to note that the current liquidity measure for the Ukrainian banks is several points worse than it was at the start of this year. His report does reveal that the banks’ non-performing loan (NPL) ratio and their capital adequacy ratio (CAR) – more standard measures of cash depletion on the banks’ books – have deteriorated while Gueorguiev has been in charge. In June 2014 the CAR was 15.9%; in January 2015, 13.8%; at the start of this past June, 7.7%.

That ought to have flagged the question of where the money the IMF was putting into the Ukrainian banks has gone, if men like Lifton, Gueorguiev and Vacher, and Mrs Lagarde, have been unable to staunch the haemorrhaging of their clients’ liquidity. In March, when the IMF released $4.6 billion of new EFF money, they also approved the NBU issue of more cash to Privatbank “to ensure timely implementation of… PrivatBank’s obligations to depositors…[and] to support its liquidity.”. Click for this story.

Gueorguiev and his staff reported in August to Lagarde and the board that “the top 10 banks submitted reports on related party exposure based on the new legal and regulatory framework by mid-June and a review process by independent accounting firms has begun. Once this is completed, the next stage—unwinding the above-the-limit loans to related parties––will commence. Additionally, the authorities are also working on the establishment of a specialized unit that will identify and monitor loans to related parties in all banks.”

Gueorguiev was reiterating a promise to do in future what he had promised, and failed to do, since June of 2014. He and the Fund management are now claiming they plan to help “the NBU’s monitoring capacity through greater information sharing with public registers and other financial sector regulators on shareholdings and asset ownership.”

“A new wave of bank diagnostics, based on data as of March 2015, is underway,” Gueorguiev is now proposing, “with the aim to identify capital shortages as a result of losses associated with the recent macroeconomic shocks and the ongoing conflict in the East.” Privatbank isn’t mentioned in the report, but as it is the leading commercially-owned systemically important bank (SIB) in the Ukraine, when the IMF reports refers to SIBs, they mean Privat.

The new staff report claims it has been decided to continue making “provision related loans in full and transfer them into a specialized unit inside the bank in case it is needed to ensure medium-term financial viability of any resolved SIB. [And] inject public funds in the SIBs only after shareholders have been completely diluted and non-deposit unsecured creditors are bailed in.” This looks like the IMF has decided to oust Kolomoisky from control of Privatbank. In practice, it’s advance warning for him to empty the bank’s pockets into his own before the dilution and other conditions take effect. That would make Gueorguiev and his IMF colleagues complicit in the money laundering schemes the Justice Department is investigating – if evidence turns up that they knew, or ought to have known, of transfer schemes intended to defraud the bank, its collateral shareholder NBU and lender IMF, by hiding the cash offshore under Kolomoisky’s personal control.

This week Gueorguiev was asked to start with data which are missing from the staff report. What is the current aggregate of IMF provision of ELA [emergency liquidity assistance] and other funds to the NBU for 2014 and 2015 through August 31? he was asked. What does the IMF understand to have been the receipt (to current date) of NBU funds by Privatbank and Bank Credit Dnepr? These ought to be uncontroversial data, required for disclosure according to what the IMF terms its transparency and governance standards in Ukraine.

Independent Ukrainian bank publications indicate that at the start of June the NBU and the associated Deposit Guarantee Fund (DGF) had loaned 131.9 billion hryvnia (UAH) to the commercial banks for liquidity support. That’s about $6.3 billion at the current dollar-hryvnia rate of exchange, all of it from the IMF. On last year’s evidence, Privatbank’s systemic importance enabled it to garner about 40% of this outlay, making about $2.5 billion.

Since the start of June, however, the IMF has given Kiev another $1.7 billion. How much of that has gone, or will go, into emergency liquidity assistance for the NBU and DGF, and how much has been moved on to Privatbank are sensitive secrets. A table in one of the technical papers attached to the IMF’s latest report indicates that between the end of June and the end of this month, the IMF is figuring the NBU will pass on about $410 million of the new money. That would make $164 million for Privatbank if it is still absorbing 40% of the total outlay.


Source: http://www.imf.org – page 86

More public is Privatbank’s claim to be currently unable to repay its foreign creditors. According to this report of July 24, the bank is required to redeem a $200 million bond issue later this month, but cannot make the repayment. If it defaults, another $150 million bond, due for redemption next year, would be called in. Foreign bondholders think the bank has the cash to repay. Privat officials claim they have been ordered by the government to cover domestic depositors first, and defer other obligations by getting deferment agreements for several more years. Follow Privat’s version of the bond deferment scheme here. The impact has been to halve the trading value of the 2015 bond:


Source: http://www.boerse-berlin.com

Rating agency Moody’s is currently warning that the rot in the Ukrainian banks will get worse, not better, despite the fresh IMF money supply. “System-wide problem loans could rise to as much as 60% of gross credit exposure from 45% at the end of 1 April 2015,” says Elena Redko, a Moody’s analyst and author of this report. “Our scenario analysis indicates that banks would need to create additional loan-loss provisions of 15% of gross loans, on top of already existing loan loss provisions, in order to fully cover expected losses. If applied, incremental provisioning would result in a negative capital adequacy ratio for the banking system,” she added. Moody’s has issued a private warning on Privatbank. :rofl:

Privatbank was asked to say how much it has received in liquidity assistance from the IMF programme. It refuses to say. It has also cancelled the English-language version of its website.

Gueorguiev has been asked what happened to the fish that got away. “How do you explain that while you were supervising the disbursement of IMF funds through the NBU to the Ukrainian banks, assessing the NBU’s regular reports and assessing loan compliance for your superiors, it was possible for Privatbank to divert at least $1.8 billion now recognized in the Ukrainian courts to be in default? What do you say in defending yourself from the charge, naturally arising now, that you are personally culpable, by intention or by carelessness, for the Privatbank violations identified in the court evidence? ” Gueorguiev isn’t claiming the constitutional right not to incriminate himself. He isn’t defending himself either.

The evidence of the disappearance of $1.8 billion has emerged in commercial court filings in Dniepropetrovsk, Kiev and elsewhere by the Privatbank group itself as recovery claims against purportedly unrelated borrowers who have defaulted. That, according to independent Ukrainian investigations, is in fact a massive fraud scheme, in which the money was loaned to related parties, deposited in offshore Privatbank accounts, before disappearing altogether. Privatbank has issued a press release, claiming the non-performing loans are genuine ones, not thefts. “We are convinced that the investigation by examining the documents to which access was granted by the court will be able to objectively assess all the circumstances together, and to establish the truth,” the bank said.

Several English-language reporters have investigated the disappearance of the $1.8 billion, starting with Graham Stack in Kiev. A selection of the offshore entities and amounts involved can be followed in this Ukrainian report. A few days ago in the US magazine Harper’s, a reporter named Andrew Cockburn claimed credit for uncovering the story himself.

In New York this week, an international banker said the publicity is confirmation of what was already known. His colleagues all understand, the source said, the extent to which IMF officials, including Lipton and his US Treasury associates, have winked at the stealing of Fund loan money by Ukrainian figures who are allies of the US-appointed officials now running the country. “It’s no news the stealing continues. But once the evidence moves into court, and then into the American press, it isn’t the Ukrainian thieves who are on the hot seat. It’s those American, British, and European nationals in charge of the cover-up, whose liability becomes actionable. How long can Lagarde and Lipton carry risks like that?”

Even the Russia-haters in Kiev publicly concede that official corruption is undiminished. Andriy Parubiy, ex-head of the Defense and National Security Council, as the President’s war office is known, recently lost out in faction-fighting over the flows of arms and money; he blames the rampant corruption – on his rivals. Parubiy (below, left) is keeping his post as Vice-Speaker of the Verkhovna Rada (parliament). Late last week, he proposed a US Department of Justice official, Mary Butler (right), for a post on the government’s Select Commission on Anti-Corruption Prosecutor.



Butler has been the Justice Department’s representative in Kiev; at present she is Deputy Chief of the Asset Forfeiture and Money Laundering Section at headquarters. Her involvement in pursuit of Firtash and the Russian telecommunications companies Vimpelcom and MTS has been reported here. When Department spokesman Carr admitted this week that an investigation of Privatbank and Kolomoisky is underway, he was asked to clarify the details with Butler. She and the spokesman aren’t saying more.

Vacher, the Fund’s resident representative in Kiev, may be of greater interest to US investigators because he appears to have been exchanging valuable favours with Pinchuk. Questioned about his trip to Venice in May to attend a Pinchuk art show and political rally, Vacher is admitting through the Fund’s press office that he wasn’t on official duty at the time. But did he stay on board Pinchuk’s motor yacht Oneness, which port logs show to have been in Venice between May 4 and May 8? Vacher and his superiors in Washington are withholding their answer. For more details of Vacher’s relationship with Pinchuk, read this. For the impact of the IMF loan programme on Credit Dnepr Bank, click here.

Reporting to Managing Director Lagarde as chief spokesmen for the Fund’s Ukraine operations are Rice, a British national, and Simonetta Nardin, an Italian. She claims to have been a journalist in Italy before joining the IMF in 1997. In a forum sponsored by the US Government’s National Endowment for Democracy, the Czech Foreign Ministry, the European Commission, and a Taiwan government office in Prague, she also claimed her role is “to make the IMF responsible and accountable for what it does.”

Nardin is ducking questions about Vacher’s political demonstration for Ukrainian causes funded by Pinchuk. She and Rice have also avoided questioning about Nardin’s own involvement in political demonstrations she has published on the internet in favour of President Barack Obama and the Democratic Party presidential candidate, Senator Elizabeth Warren. The IMF Staff Code forbids this.


Source: http://picasaweb.google.com

Nardin (above, left) says she studied at universities in Milan and London. Between 1994 and joining the IMF press office in 1997, Nardin claims she was a journalist in Italy. The Italian guild of journalists (Ordine dei Giornalisti) recorded her membership for the Lazio region (Rome) in October 1998. By that time she had been serving at the IMF for eighteen months. There is no sign that she had published as a reporter to qualify for guild membership; no record of her byline has been found in Milan and Rome. When asked last month to provide the evidence for her claim, Nardin refused.

As soon as she was asked, Nardin’s biography was removed from the IMF website. What remains is the record from last December, when Rice promoted her to be chief of his Media Relations Division. Reporters at a Fund briefing were obliged to clap their hands. “I would like to give a quick round of applause to Simonetta,” announced the briefer, “because she deserves this appointment. For those of you who do not know Simonetta it’s important that you get to know her. So I look forward to hearing more from you in the future.”

______________________________________________________________

Ausgezeichnet!

@Akim, @jouni, European Values, et cetera. :scared2:

@Rowdy, @arpakola, I said this long time back that Greece and Ukraine got loans when they were known to be risky borrowers; a country's ability or inability to repay loans has nothing to do with it actually getting the loans; and that credit ratings are useless.
 

pmaitra

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The Guardian glorifes neo-Nazis.

To many, this is unsurprising, considering the sudden shift in its tone following the change in ownership.


Van displays the ‘White Power’ 14/88 symbol where ‘88’ stands for ‘Heil Hitler’. Alongside is the emblem of the notorious SS-Dirlewanger Brigade, for which The Guardian gives its lesser known (and less notorious) name - 36th Waffen Grenadier of the SS

The angle it finds interesting is that the fighters in question are women, the fact they’re part of an openly neo-Nazi outfit, less so – after all they’re on the pro-western side
http://russia-insider.com/en/2015/03/11/4326
 

Rowdy

Co ja kurwa czytam!
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BREAKING: IMF Officials Helped Steal Ukraine Funds - US Investigating
  • Highly unusual for US Department of Justice to be investigating a pro-western oligarch like Igor Kolomoisky
  • But apparently his PrivatBank hiding $1.8 billion of IMF funds was too much even for Washington
  • Now it appears, the bank had help from IMF officials who are running for cover and refusing to answer questions
John Helmer | (Dances with Bears) | Russia Insider


As long as it's not too open

Officials of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) are in flight from evidence of negligence, incompetence, and corruption in their management of billions of dollars in loans for Ukraine.

Nikolai Gueorguiev, head of the Ukraine team at IMF headquarters in Washington, DC, and Jerome Vacher, the IMF representative in Kiev, refuse to respond to questions on their role in the offshore diversion of IMF loan money through Privatbank and Credit Dnepr Bank, banks owned by Ukrainian oligarchs Igor Kolomoisky and Victor Pinchuk. The Fund’s Managing Director Christine Lagarde (lead image, front) and her spokesman, Gerry Rice (rear), are covering up evidence of conflicts of interest and multiple violations of the IMF Staff Code of Conduct which have been occurring in the Ukraine loan programme. Simonetta Nardin, head of the Fund’s media relations, refuses to explain her apparent violations of the Code, or respond to evidence that she fabricated elements of her career resume.

On Tuesday a spokesman at the US Department of Justice in Washington confirmed that an investigation is under way of the role played by US clearing banks in the movement of IMF funds through the Privatbank group and companies connected with Kolomoisky. Speaking for the Asset Forefeiture and Money Laundering Section, Peter Carr declined to give more details.

In recent indictments presented to US courts, Justice Department officials have defined the crime of money laundering as the transmission or transfer of money through “a place in the United States to or through a place outside the United States” with the “intent to promote the carrying on of specified unlawful activity”; with knowledge that the transfer of funds represents “the proceeds of some unlawful activity”; and with the intention to “conceal or disguise the nature, the location, the source, the ownership, or the control of the proceeds of unspecified unlawful activity”.

The role of US system banks, such as Citibank, Bank of America, and JPMorgan Chase, in clearing US dollar transactions has been the basis of selective Justice Department prosecutions of Russian and pro-Russian Ukrainian companies and individuals since the toppling of President Victor Yanukovich in Kiev in February 2014. In contrast, Ukrainian allies of the US in that operation, including Yulia Tymoshenko (below, left), Kolomoisky (centre), and Pinchuk (right), have not been pursued on court evidence of their involvement in corruption and money-laundering.



Washington’s selectivity and political favouritism was condemned by an Austrian court in May, when a US extradition request for Dmitry Firtash on corruption charges was rejected. Justice Department lawyers are now attempting a retrial of their allegations in an appeals court in Vienna.

For the Justice Department to acknowledge this week that it is investigating Kolomoisky is unusual. Kolomoisky himself was last recorded as visiting the US in April; follow that story here. He is based in Geneva, where a Swiss Government investigation of his qualification for renewal of a residency permit continues withoutend.

For the US to acknowledge opening an investigation of IMF lending to Ukraine is unprecedented. The IMF resumed its loan disbursements to Ukraine in March. This was after a hiatus of six months from October of 2014, when the Stand-By Arrangement (SBA) agreed the previous April was suspended as Fund officials attempted to convince the board that the Kiev government was capable of repaying its debts and meeting its loan conditions. When the Fund launched the SBA on April 30, 2014, it had claimed: “A strong and comprehensive structural reform package is critical to reduce corruption…to build capacity to more effectively conduct enforcement of anti-money laundering and anti-corruption legislation.”

The IMF reports that in 2014 it gave $2.2 billion to the National Bank of Ukraine (NBU) before the suspension. Another $5.4 billion in IMF cash was paid to Kiev for what is called “budget support”. That also included warfighting in eastern Ukraine.

When the IMF board agreed to restart lending with a new arrangement called the Extended Fund Facility (EFF), the American deputy managing director of the Fund, David Lipton, claimed: “Restoring a sound banking system is key for economic recovery. To this end, the strategy to strengthen banks through recapitalization, reduction of related-party lending, and resolution of impaired assets should be implemented decisively.” Using the future tense Lipton (below, left) was acknowledging that next to nothing had been done to reform the Ukrainian banks in fifteen months.



Gueorguiev (right), an ex-official of the Bulgarian government, has claimed he is in charge of the independent auditing and supervision of the Ukrainian banks; for the record of his admissions in June 2014, click. Since then Gueorguiev refuses to answer questions.

In the new staff report for which he and Jerome Vacher, the IMF resident representative in Kiev, are responsible, issued a month ago, they admitted the condition of the Ukrainian banks is parlous. “Outstanding NBU loans are still elevated for a number of domestic banks. At end-June, the aggregate liquidity ratio among the 35 largest banks was 15.2 percent, although seven of these domestic privately-owned banks had liquidity ratios below 5 percent.” Privat and Credit Dnepr, the Kolomoisky and Pinchuk pocket banks, aren’t identified.

Gueorguiev omits to note that the current liquidity measure for the Ukrainian banks is several points worse than it was at the start of this year. His report does reveal that the banks’ non-performing loan (NPL) ratio and their capital adequacy ratio (CAR) – more standard measures of cash depletion on the banks’ books – have deteriorated while Gueorguiev has been in charge. In June 2014 the CAR was 15.9%; in January 2015, 13.8%; at the start of this past June, 7.7%.

That ought to have flagged the question of where the money the IMF was putting into the Ukrainian banks has gone, if men like Lifton, Gueorguiev and Vacher, and Mrs Lagarde, have been unable to staunch the haemorrhaging of their clients’ liquidity. In March, when the IMF released $4.6 billion of new EFF money, they also approved the NBU issue of more cash to Privatbank “to ensure timely implementation of… PrivatBank’s obligations to depositors…[and] to support its liquidity.”. Click for this story.

Gueorguiev and his staff reported in August to Lagarde and the board that “the top 10 banks submitted reports on related party exposure based on the new legal and regulatory framework by mid-June and a review process by independent accounting firms has begun. Once this is completed, the next stage—unwinding the above-the-limit loans to related parties––will commence. Additionally, the authorities are also working on the establishment of a specialized unit that will identify and monitor loans to related parties in all banks.”

Gueorguiev was reiterating a promise to do in future what he had promised, and failed to do, since June of 2014. He and the Fund management are now claiming they plan to help “the NBU’s monitoring capacity through greater information sharing with public registers and other financial sector regulators on shareholdings and asset ownership.”

“A new wave of bank diagnostics, based on data as of March 2015, is underway,” Gueorguiev is now proposing, “with the aim to identify capital shortages as a result of losses associated with the recent macroeconomic shocks and the ongoing conflict in the East.” Privatbank isn’t mentioned in the report, but as it is the leading commercially-owned systemically important bank (SIB) in the Ukraine, when the IMF reports refers to SIBs, they mean Privat.

The new staff report claims it has been decided to continue making “provision related loans in full and transfer them into a specialized unit inside the bank in case it is needed to ensure medium-term financial viability of any resolved SIB. [And] inject public funds in the SIBs only after shareholders have been completely diluted and non-deposit unsecured creditors are bailed in.” This looks like the IMF has decided to oust Kolomoisky from control of Privatbank. In practice, it’s advance warning for him to empty the bank’s pockets into his own before the dilution and other conditions take effect. That would make Gueorguiev and his IMF colleagues complicit in the money laundering schemes the Justice Department is investigating – if evidence turns up that they knew, or ought to have known, of transfer schemes intended to defraud the bank, its collateral shareholder NBU and lender IMF, by hiding the cash offshore under Kolomoisky’s personal control.

This week Gueorguiev was asked to start with data which are missing from the staff report. What is the current aggregate of IMF provision of ELA [emergency liquidity assistance] and other funds to the NBU for 2014 and 2015 through August 31? he was asked. What does the IMF understand to have been the receipt (to current date) of NBU funds by Privatbank and Bank Credit Dnepr? These ought to be uncontroversial data, required for disclosure according to what the IMF terms its transparency and governance standards in Ukraine.

Independent Ukrainian bank publications indicate that at the start of June the NBU and the associated Deposit Guarantee Fund (DGF) had loaned 131.9 billion hryvnia (UAH) to the commercial banks for liquidity support. That’s about $6.3 billion at the current dollar-hryvnia rate of exchange, all of it from the IMF. On last year’s evidence, Privatbank’s systemic importance enabled it to garner about 40% of this outlay, making about $2.5 billion.

Since the start of June, however, the IMF has given Kiev another $1.7 billion. How much of that has gone, or will go, into emergency liquidity assistance for the NBU and DGF, and how much has been moved on to Privatbank are sensitive secrets. A table in one of the technical papers attached to the IMF’s latest report indicates that between the end of June and the end of this month, the IMF is figuring the NBU will pass on about $410 million of the new money. That would make $164 million for Privatbank if it is still absorbing 40% of the total outlay.


Source: http://www.imf.org – page 86

More public is Privatbank’s claim to be currently unable to repay its foreign creditors. According to this report of July 24, the bank is required to redeem a $200 million bond issue later this month, but cannot make the repayment. If it defaults, another $150 million bond, due for redemption next year, would be called in. Foreign bondholders think the bank has the cash to repay. Privat officials claim they have been ordered by the government to cover domestic depositors first, and defer other obligations by getting deferment agreements for several more years. Follow Privat’s version of the bond deferment scheme here. The impact has been to halve the trading value of the 2015 bond:


Source: http://www.boerse-berlin.com

Rating agency Moody’s is currently warning that the rot in the Ukrainian banks will get worse, not better, despite the fresh IMF money supply. “System-wide problem loans could rise to as much as 60% of gross credit exposure from 45% at the end of 1 April 2015,” says Elena Redko, a Moody’s analyst and author of this report. “Our scenario analysis indicates that banks would need to create additional loan-loss provisions of 15% of gross loans, on top of already existing loan loss provisions, in order to fully cover expected losses. If applied, incremental provisioning would result in a negative capital adequacy ratio for the banking system,” she added. Moody’s has issued a private warning on Privatbank. :rofl:

Privatbank was asked to say how much it has received in liquidity assistance from the IMF programme. It refuses to say. It has also cancelled the English-language version of its website.

Gueorguiev has been asked what happened to the fish that got away. “How do you explain that while you were supervising the disbursement of IMF funds through the NBU to the Ukrainian banks, assessing the NBU’s regular reports and assessing loan compliance for your superiors, it was possible for Privatbank to divert at least $1.8 billion now recognized in the Ukrainian courts to be in default? What do you say in defending yourself from the charge, naturally arising now, that you are personally culpable, by intention or by carelessness, for the Privatbank violations identified in the court evidence? ” Gueorguiev isn’t claiming the constitutional right not to incriminate himself. He isn’t defending himself either.

The evidence of the disappearance of $1.8 billion has emerged in commercial court filings in Dniepropetrovsk, Kiev and elsewhere by the Privatbank group itself as recovery claims against purportedly unrelated borrowers who have defaulted. That, according to independent Ukrainian investigations, is in fact a massive fraud scheme, in which the money was loaned to related parties, deposited in offshore Privatbank accounts, before disappearing altogether. Privatbank has issued a press release, claiming the non-performing loans are genuine ones, not thefts. “We are convinced that the investigation by examining the documents to which access was granted by the court will be able to objectively assess all the circumstances together, and to establish the truth,” the bank said.

Several English-language reporters have investigated the disappearance of the $1.8 billion, starting with Graham Stack in Kiev. A selection of the offshore entities and amounts involved can be followed in this Ukrainian report. A few days ago in the US magazine Harper’s, a reporter named Andrew Cockburn claimed credit for uncovering the story himself.

In New York this week, an international banker said the publicity is confirmation of what was already known. His colleagues all understand, the source said, the extent to which IMF officials, including Lipton and his US Treasury associates, have winked at the stealing of Fund loan money by Ukrainian figures who are allies of the US-appointed officials now running the country. “It’s no news the stealing continues. But once the evidence moves into court, and then into the American press, it isn’t the Ukrainian thieves who are on the hot seat. It’s those American, British, and European nationals in charge of the cover-up, whose liability becomes actionable. How long can Lagarde and Lipton carry risks like that?”

Even the Russia-haters in Kiev publicly concede that official corruption is undiminished. Andriy Parubiy, ex-head of the Defense and National Security Council, as the President’s war office is known, recently lost out in faction-fighting over the flows of arms and money; he blames the rampant corruption – on his rivals. Parubiy (below, left) is keeping his post as Vice-Speaker of the Verkhovna Rada (parliament). Late last week, he proposed a US Department of Justice official, Mary Butler (right), for a post on the government’s Select Commission on Anti-Corruption Prosecutor.



Butler has been the Justice Department’s representative in Kiev; at present she is Deputy Chief of the Asset Forfeiture and Money Laundering Section at headquarters. Her involvement in pursuit of Firtash and the Russian telecommunications companies Vimpelcom and MTS has been reported here. When Department spokesman Carr admitted this week that an investigation of Privatbank and Kolomoisky is underway, he was asked to clarify the details with Butler. She and the spokesman aren’t saying more.

Vacher, the Fund’s resident representative in Kiev, may be of greater interest to US investigators because he appears to have been exchanging valuable favours with Pinchuk. Questioned about his trip to Venice in May to attend a Pinchuk art show and political rally, Vacher is admitting through the Fund’s press office that he wasn’t on official duty at the time. But did he stay on board Pinchuk’s motor yacht Oneness, which port logs show to have been in Venice between May 4 and May 8? Vacher and his superiors in Washington are withholding their answer. For more details of Vacher’s relationship with Pinchuk, read this. For the impact of the IMF loan programme on Credit Dnepr Bank, click here.

Reporting to Managing Director Lagarde as chief spokesmen for the Fund’s Ukraine operations are Rice, a British national, and Simonetta Nardin, an Italian. She claims to have been a journalist in Italy before joining the IMF in 1997. In a forum sponsored by the US Government’s National Endowment for Democracy, the Czech Foreign Ministry, the European Commission, and a Taiwan government office in Prague, she also claimed her role is “to make the IMF responsible and accountable for what it does.”

Nardin is ducking questions about Vacher’s political demonstration for Ukrainian causes funded by Pinchuk. She and Rice have also avoided questioning about Nardin’s own involvement in political demonstrations she has published on the internet in favour of President Barack Obama and the Democratic Party presidential candidate, Senator Elizabeth Warren. The IMF Staff Code forbids this.


Source: http://picasaweb.google.com

Nardin (above, left) says she studied at universities in Milan and London. Between 1994 and joining the IMF press office in 1997, Nardin claims she was a journalist in Italy. The Italian guild of journalists (Ordine dei Giornalisti) recorded her membership for the Lazio region (Rome) in October 1998. By that time she had been serving at the IMF for eighteen months. There is no sign that she had published as a reporter to qualify for guild membership; no record of her byline has been found in Milan and Rome. When asked last month to provide the evidence for her claim, Nardin refused.

As soon as she was asked, Nardin’s biography was removed from the IMF website. What remains is the record from last December, when Rice promoted her to be chief of his Media Relations Division. Reporters at a Fund briefing were obliged to clap their hands. “I would like to give a quick round of applause to Simonetta,” announced the briefer, “because she deserves this appointment. For those of you who do not know Simonetta it’s important that you get to know her. So I look forward to hearing more from you in the future.”

______________________________________________________________

Ausgezeichnet!

@Akim, @jouni, European Values, et cetera. :scared2:

@Rowdy, @arpakola, I said this long time back that Greece and Ukraine got loans when they were known to be risky borrowers; a country's ability or inability to repay loans has nothing to do with it actually getting the loans; and that credit ratings are useless.
This is nothing. IMF will pay Ukraine $3bn which will inturn be paid to Russia :lol:
EDIT: Damn that Julia Timoshenko .... hot b!tch gone mad
 

Akim

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You can't build them without Russian parts. Just like you can't build T-84 Oplot M or BTR-4 without Russian parts.
All its components from Russia created analogs. It wasn't before meaning to release, because the Ukrainian army is not buying new armored vehicles, and to import was a small party. Economically it was better to buy spare part in Russia. Now, the Kiev armored plant produces 20 - BTR-3E1 per month, Kharkov armored plant - 18 BTR-4 (and its modifications) in the month, Lviv armored plant has not yet started the production of Dozor-B.
The production of tanks was always in a closed loop.
 

pmaitra

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Ukrainian civil war in Donbass tought us one important thing: we are both Russias, but artifically divided by lies and propaganda.
The same you are. Despite the countries you live in, you are both indians, divided by English colonisators when they have left India to prevent your successful development and get puppet strings to manipulate you and pakis both.
The best thing you can do is to forget and forgive each other to re-unite India for your common good.

Отправлено с моего XT1080 через Tapatalk
Sorry bro. That ain't gonna happen ever. Yes, Pakistan was created from India. But, you cannot reattach a severed limb which has already got the rot. It will just kill the healthy body, too.
I am quoting in Ukrainian Civil War thread because I think we should keep Sukhoi-30 MKI Thread for Sukhoi-30 MKI, and not divert further.

It is true, that India, historically speaking, is the land south of Hindu Kush and Himalayas. This means, all the people of India, Pakistan, Nepal, and southern Afghanistan are essentially Indians. It is also true that ethnically, Indians and Pakistanis are one nation, the Indian nation.

Metamorphosis of terminologies:
  • The term Hindu, in antiquity, referred to an ethnic group that lived in the Indian subcontinent.
  • The term Hindu, in modernity, refers to a religion, not an ethnic group.
Now, let's compare artificial borders:
  • Is the border between India and Pakistan artificial? Yes.
  • Is the border between the Russian Federation and Ukraine (or whatever is left of it) artificial? Yes.


  • Are Indians and Pakistanis the same people? Yes.
  • Are Russians and Ukrainians the same people? Yes.

  • Would the people of India like to take Pakistan with its demographics back? Most would say no.
  • Would the people of the Russian Federation like to take Ukraine and its demographics back? Most would probably say yes. This is where the parallels between Russia-Ukraine and India-Pakistan end.

Coming back to the Indian perspective, many still use the term "Russian" to refer to all the lands and peoples that were part of the Tsarist Russian Empire. So, a person from Minsk is called Russian. A person from Odessa is called Russian. A person from Novosibirsk is called Russian. A person from Alma-Ata is called Russian, A person from Tashkent is called Russian Muslim, but still, Russian.

This did not change when the USSR came into existence. The term Russian was used to refer to anyone from any part of the USSR.
 

gadeshi

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I am quoting in Ukrainian Civil War thread because I think we should keep Sukhoi-30 MKI Thread for Sukhoi-30 MKI, and not divert further.

It is true, that India, historically speaking, is the land south of Hindu Kush and Himalayas. This means, all the people of India, Pakistan, Nepal, and southern Afghanistan are essentially Indians. It is also true that ethnically, Indians and Pakistanis are one nation, the Indian nation.

Metamorphosis of terminologies:
  • The term Hindu, in antiquity, referred to an ethnic group that lived in the Indian subcontinent.
  • The term Hindu, in modernity, refers to a religion, not an ethnic group.
Now, let's compare artificial borders:
  • Is the border between India and Pakistan artificial? Yes.
  • Is the border between the Russian Federation and Ukraine (or whatever is left of it) artificial? Yes.


  • Are Indians and Pakistanis the same people? Yes.
  • Are Russians and Ukrainians the same people? Yes.

  • Would the people of India like to take Pakistan with its demographics back? Most would say no.
  • Would the people of the Russian Federation like to take Ukraine and its demographics back? Most would probably say yes. This is where the parallels between Russia-Ukraine and India-Pakistan end.

Coming back to the Indian perspective, many still use the term "Russian" to refer to all the lands and peoples that were part of the Tsarist Russian Empire. So, a person from Minsk is called Russian. A person from Odessa is called Russian. A person from Novosibirsk is called Russian. A person from Alma-Ata is called Russian, A person from Tashkent is called Russian Muslim, but still, Russian.

This did not change when the USSR came into existence. The term Russian was used to refer to anyone from any part of the USSR.
Great post and comparison, bro.
The goal of my post is to tell the indian people in the Su-30 branch not to offend pakis and vice versa, because you are the one and your fights (even virtual ones) serve the forces that have divided you and want you to kill each other.

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Coming back to the Indian perspective, many still use the term "Russian" to refer to all the lands and peoples that were part of the Tsarist Russian Empire. So, a person from Minsk is called Russian. A person from Odessa is called Russian. A person from Novosibirsk is called Russian. A person from Alma-Ata is called Russian, A person from Tashkent is called Russian Muslim, but still, Russian.

This did not change when the USSR came into existence. The term Russian was used to refer to anyone from any part of the USSR.
I have lived almost 5 years in Hungary (January 85 - November 89). There we all were called by the RUSSIANS (and the ethnic Russian and Ukrainian and Georgian) If it was in socialist Hungary, what can we expect from the Indian people?
 

AnantS

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@Akim, I think I am guilty of the same, till late I considered people from erstwhile states of USSR as Russians only. And still have difficulty in understanding fights between Russia and its erstwhile states. Maybe its because in breaking up of USSR, we In India saw Russia as a victim party who saw its country broken into several states.
I think unknowingly subconsciously we see breaking up of USSR as in breaking up of India in partition and hence Russia earning sympathy vote.
 

Akim

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@Akim, I think I am guilty of the same, till late I considered people from erstwhile states of USSR as Russians only. And still have difficulty in understanding fights between Russia and its erstwhile states. Maybe its because in breaking up of USSR, we In India saw Russia as a victim party who saw its country broken into several states.
I think unknowingly subconsciously we see breaking up of USSR as in breaking up of India in partition and hence Russia earning sympathy vote.
In English there are no words:россиянин (a Russian citizen). The problem is not in the mentality of certain people in the path of development. @pmaitra said that he loves Russia because she helped starving India. He still doesn't understand the difference between the USSR and modern Russia. It is the same as all in Europe to call the Germans, because this country is an EU member.
 

pmaitra

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In English there are no words:россиянин (a Russian citizen). The problem is not in the mentality of certain people in the path of development. @pmaitra said that he loves Russia because she helped starving India. He still doesn't understand the difference between the USSR and modern Russia. It is the same as all in Europe to call the Germans, because this country is an EU member.
I know what is Rosyanin and what is Tatarin. I have also read a lot of Russian history from Soviet historians. So, what I understand of Russia will be different from what modern Russian historians will say about Russia. I also know that. Everyone has an opinion. What is USSR? What is modern Russia? Do you think everyone will agree? Does everybody in Ukraine agree with each other? Will Zakharchenko agree with Nuland's Boy Yatz? You tell me.
 

Akim

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I know what is Rosyanin and what is Tatarin. I have also read a lot of Russian history from Soviet historians. So, what I understand of Russia will be different from what modern Russian historians will say about Russia. I also know that. Everyone has an opinion. What is USSR? What is modern Russia? Do you think everyone will agree? Does everybody in Ukraine agree with each other? Will Zakharchenko agree with Nuland's Boy Yatz? You tell me.
Dissent is always and in any country. In India there are no separatists? Or in America?

 
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pmaitra

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Dissent is always and in any country. In India there are no separatists? Or in America?
Yes, there are separatists, but we always try to suppress separatism, and encourage federalism, because we want to keep India united.

Similarly, Russia should also try to keep its country united. That is why, Russia should not have been divided using artificial lines. One artificial line is between Russian SFSR and Ukrainian SSR, which today is the artificial line between Russian Federation and Ukraine.

At the collapse of the USSR, Russia should have stopped the separatism of Ukraine. Russia was weak then, and it did not think Ukraine would be taken over by NATO supported bandits. Status quo ante should be restored, and historical Russian lands should unite. Yes, federalization should be there, freedom of speech should be there, but separatism, absolutely no.

BTW, the Confederate Flag is not only about separatism. It is about States' Rights enshrined in the US Constitution. Slavery was already in the process of being eliminated in many places in the Confederate States before the start of the Civil War.
 

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Yes, there are separatists, but we always try to suppress separatism, and encourage federalism, because we want to keep India united.

Similarly, Russia should also try to keep its country united. That is why, Russia should not have been divided using artificial lines. One artificial line is between Russian SFSR and Ukrainian SSR, which today is the artificial line between Russian Federation and Ukraine.

At the collapse of the USSR, Russia should have stopped the separatism of Ukraine. Russia was weak then, and it did not think Ukraine would be taken over by NATO supported bandits. Status quo ante should be restored, and historical Russian lands should unite. Yes, federalization should be there, freedom of speech should be there, but separatism, absolutely no. .
International law says that you're wrong.
I ask you once again: do not go into the historical wilds. I show you photos TODAY,no pictures YESTERDAY.
 

pmaitra

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International law says that you're wrong.
I ask you once again: do not go into the historical wilds. I show you photos TODAY,no pictures YESTERDAY.
A few reminders about international law:
  1. International law is for weak countries, not for a country like the Russian Federation or USA.
  2. International law applies to international events, not domestic events, and Russo-Ukrainian disagreement is an internal issue of Russia, because Ukraine is historical Russian land. Ukraine is Malo-Russia. I don't care if you disagree. Prokudin-Gorsky agrees with me.
I can show you photos of today. Here is a photo of today.


You want to preserve status quo. I want to restore status quo ante. The process has begun.
 

Akim

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A few reminders about international law:
  1. International law is for weak countries, not for a country like the Russian Federation or USA.
  2. International law applies to international events, not domestic events, and Russo-Ukrainian disagreement is an internal issue of Russia, because Ukraine is historical Russian land. Ukraine is Malo-Russia. I don't care if you disagree. Prokudin-Gorsky agrees with me.
I can show you photos of today. Here is a photo of today.


You want to preserve status quo. I want to restore status quo ante. The process has begun.

Maybe you will remember the agreement between Ukraine and Russia from 97 years? You're an imperialist.
 

pmaitra

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As Putin?:biggrin2: Viva Imperator!
Viva el Presidente, as they say in Spanish. :biggrin2: Let's talk about Nuland’s Boy Yatz.

Супер Сухой


Супер Сука
 
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