Category Archives: canada

Russian president cancels Vancouver visit: Announcement follows team’s poor Olympic results [Article]

From the CBC:

MedvedRussian President Dmitry Medvedev has cancelled his visit to Vancouver to attend the closing ceremonies of the Winter Olympics on Sunday evening, CBC News has learned.

The announcement comes as a surprise because Russia is the next host of the Winter Olympics in Sochi in 2014, and Medvedev had planned to attend.

Russia has also fared poorly in the medal count at the Vancouver Olympics, holding fifth place behind Canada as of Thursday morning with 13 medals — less than half of their predicted results.

International Olympic Committee president Jacques Rogge called out Medvedev for his country’s repeated doping violations in cross-country skiing and biathlon.

The suspicions surrounding the Russians, who have had eight biathletes and cross-country skiers banned for doping since the end of the 2009 World Cup season, were raised repeatedly during Rogge’s media conference in Vancouver on Feb. 9.

Russia whines about ‘cowardly’ Canada [Article]

From the The Toronto Star:

The next Winter Olympics is shaping up as a Cold War-style battle between Canada and Russia after a blistering editorial in Pravda labeled us as a nation of cowardly, incompetent war criminals.

The editorial, entitled Vancouver: Mutton Dressed as Lamb, goes straight for the eyes from the outset. “Vancouver is not fit to hold the Winter Olympics,” it declares in the opening paragraph.

And that was before Canada whipped Russia in the hockey quarter finals. Today, the site was less expansive.

“The Red Machine Runs into a Maple Tree,” was Pravda’s headline. Other newspaper banners across Russia included “Nightmare in Vancouver” and “Down and Out.”

Reading back on Pravda’s screed, the schadenfreude will be thick for Canadian supporters. The website’s main athletic complaint is about a short-notice drug test issued to Russian skier Natalya Korosteleva. It neglects to mention that VANOC organizers have no input into the drug-testing regime of any particular sporting body.

It also impugns us for the decision to give the gold medal in men’s figure skating to American Evan Lysacek over Russian Evgeni Plushenko – as if we had some say in that, either.

“Even more diligent critics of Vancouver 2010 have been astonished by the editorial,” the Times of London wrote today.

Last night, Russian hockey stars were being … well … Russian about their loss.

Read the rest of the article

Ukrainian museum urges feds to make funding decision [Article]

From the CBC:

Supporters of a Ukrainian museum in Edmonton say they desperately need a new and bigger building, and they want answers from Ottawa about whether it will help cover expenses.

The province, the city and individuals have all chipped in after a 10-year fundraising campaign by the Ukrainian Canadian Archives Museum of Alberta. But the museum is still waiting for final approval and cash from Ottawa.

“People maybe get a little bit disappointed about the lack of progress so it’s hard to get people enthusiastic about something that’s stagnated,” said museum board member Paul Teterenko

Museum officials say they never thought it would take this long, and neither did Conservative MP Peter Goldring, a long-time supporter of the project.

“(We were) just about ready to see ink on paper. What happened? I don’t know. I really don’t know,” he said.

Museum officials hope recently-appointed Minister of Public Works Rona Ambrose, an Edmonton MP, will help push the project along.

Teterenko says a bigger museum will bring in Ukrainian artifacts from Europe.

Watch the Olympics in Ukrainian (Ontario only)

If you live in Ontario, TV channel OMNI 1  will be airing some parts of the Olympics in the Ukrainian language:

Ukrainian

February 13, 2010
20:00 – 21:00     Speed Skating – Men’s 5000m [Taped]
21:00 – 22:00     Long Track Speed Skating: Men’s 5000m [Taped]

February 20, 2010
20:00 – 21:00     Alpine Skiing – Ladies’ Super-G [Tape]     OMNI 1
21:00 – 22:00     Cross-Country Skiing: Men’s 15km Pursuit [Tape]     OMNI 1

February 27, 2010
20:00 – 22:00     Figure Skating – Exhibition Gala     OMNI 1 [UKR]

Stepan Bandera’s grandson defends Hero of Ukraine to clear his family name

BanderaOn January 22nd, one of President Yushchenko’s last decrees was to award the late Stepan Bandera with the award of ‘Hero of Ukraine’ for “defending national idea and for the fight for independent Ukrainian state”. A leader of the Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists (OUN), it was one of the few groups that had to fight both the Nazis and the Soviets in World War 2 for an independent Ukraine. Yushchenko was Ukraine’s first and only President to advocate worldwide recognition of the genocide that was the Holodomor, open trade to the west and promote Ukrainian language and culture in its own country where Russian hegemony has been spreading for centuries.

Last Sunday (Feb 7), the Edmonton Journal produced an op-ed from David Marples – an Alberta historian and ‘Ukraine expert’ entitled “Hero of Ukraine linked to Jewish killings”. The article sparked outrage and the Journal received letters this week from the Ukrainian community including other members of the newspaper media:

In February 2008, Ukrainian Security Services (SBU) archive representative Oleksander Ishchuk showed declassified documents which provide an objective basis to state that OUN (the Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists) is not connected with any violent actions against the civilian population of L’viv on or after July 4, 1941.

As well as Bandera’s own grandson had to write in to defend his family’s history:

The Soviet investigation into the killing of L’viv’s Jews identified the “42 butchers of L’viv” responsible for the slaughter of the Jewish innocents in July of 1941. That list, compiled immediately after the Second World War and submitted to the Nuremberg military tribunals for prosecution, does not contain a single member of the Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists.

Furthermore, Marples neglects to mention that Stepan Bandera’s two brothers — Oleksa and Vasyl — were killed by the Nazis in Auschwitz. Their tattoo numbers were 51020 and 49271 respectively.

Our family cleared the Bandera name before the Commission of Inquiry on War Criminals in Canada in 1985.

Sadly while the Edmonton Journal printed these replies in their ‘Opinion’ section, it reproduced Marples’ original op-ed as news (with a less sensational title) yesterday as “Yushchenko erred in honouring Bandera”. It’s difficult to know how much the article has changed (if at all) since the original op-ed has now been deleted.

The Edmonton Journal’s biases has been shockingly apparent especially for a town with such a large Ukrainian population, it was the only outlet to produce this pessimistic news piece Tuesday: “Young Ukrainians Dismiss Talk Of Another Orange Revolution”

The new President of Ukraine Viktor Yanukovych has no plans of stripping Bandera the medal of honour.

The Canadian courts in the 1980’s looked into matters of war crimes for Ukrainian groups in World War 2 and could not find any evidence to make such a conviction:

The Commission of Inquiry on War Crimes was established in February 1985 in Canada, with the purpose of exposing and prosecuting war criminals residing in Canada. The Simon Wiesenthal Center and other Jewish groups in Canada have repeatedly denounced the Ukrainian Division Galicia as a perpetrator of war crimes. Because of these allegations, the veterans of the Division came under the scrutiny of this Commission, which during its investigation lasting several years, was not able to establish any base to the accusation.