After several days of persuasion, Ukraine agreed to give international monitors access to its gas pipelines. Now experts from Russia, Ukraine, Europe and independent companies will be able to know how much gas Gazprom moved to Ukraine and how much gas reached the European buyers. This is our first victory in the "gas war", and is in fact the first time in history that Ukraine has made such a concession. At stake are billions of dollars, because Kiev not only stole gas but probably sold the gas it bought from Russia at a discount price, charging market prices that are twice as high. However, things were not that straightforward; even the framework Rules of the Monitoring of the Transit of Natural Gas through Ukraine signed by Russia differ markedly from the document signed by Ukrainian Prime Minister Yulia Tymoshenko. Izvestia has tried to pinpoint the differences.
Government launches targeted support of companies, regions.
Resuming gas transit through Ukraine postponed again as Russia admits interest in transit pipeline
On January 1, 2009, Prime Minister Vladimir Putin, who had been personally in charge of Russia's actions in the Russian-Ukrainian gas dispute from late December, approved the first "conciliation" document, i.e., a protocol establishing a multilateral commission to monitor gas flow at facilities in Russia, Ukraine and the European Union. If a Ukrainian representative signs this protocol today, Gazprom could resume gas supplies to EU countries as early as tomorrow. Supplies were disrupted on January 7, 2009. The gas conflict could now return to its previous format: an information war.
On December 24, 2008, Gazprom, in the course of its negotiations with a Naftogaz of Ukraine delegation arriving in Moscow, demanded that Ukraine pay the $2.118 billion it owed for gas supplies in 2008 before signing a contract for 2009.
A wave of protests against car import duty hikes rocked Russian regions on January 8 and 10. Protesters also called for the Putin government's resignation and for a check to rising housing and utilities prices. Political parties and other movements joined in the car owners' protests, which predictably led to occasional arrests of the most fervent activists. Opposition sources warn that protests will scale up in January, with political slogans added to economic slogans.
Russia has started 2009 with another gas war. The results of the campaign are as follows: Ukraine is left without gas, Russia without gas transit, and both countries are quickly ruining their reputation in the face of freezing Europe.
Participants in the Russian-Ukrainian gas conflict admitted its policy-induced nature. Members of the Ukrainian President's team believe that Prime Minister Yulia Tymoshenko has sided with Moscow, and the conflict is playing into her hands.
"The world will face a global financial crisis when the 44th president comes to office (George W. Bush is the 43rd), and the crisis will reach its peak in 2012, first in the US, and then in Europe." These forecasts by astrologer Pavel Globa were made several years ago (see Komsomolskaya Pravda, September 14, 2001, December 20, 2007, at www.kp.ru). But no one listened to his discouraging stories. The idea of America's collapse and the prediction that it would be ranked 20th not first, seemed seditious. But it turned out that the stars were right. So what do they say about today's world?
"The world will face a global financial crisis when the 44th president comes to office (George W. Bush is the 43rd), and the crisis will reach its peak in 2012, first in the US, and then in Europe." These forecasts by astrologer Pavel Globa were made several years ago (see Komsomolskaya Pravda, September 14, 2001, December 20, 2007, at www.kp.ru). But no one listened to his discouraging stories. The idea of America's collapse and the prediction that it would be ranked 20th not first, seemed seditious. But it turned out that the stars were right. So what do they say about today's world?