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A bitter turn for Orange Revolution Corruption appears endemic even in Yushchenko's circle
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International Herald Tribune
09-16-2005
In the last weeks of Leonid Kuchma's presidency, tarred with scandal, an American company reached an agreement with his government to take control of a state-owned chemical factory in eastern Ukraine under terms that have been criticized as secretive and suspiciously generous. On Sept. 2, dozens of men dressed in camouflage and body armor stormed and seized the headquarters of the factory, the Severodonetsk Azot Association. They ...
Related newspaper, magazine, and journal articles from HighBeam Research
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Yushchenko continues fight for Ukraine presidency despite poisoning.
Chicago Tribune (Chicago, IL)
; ... the newspaper, go to http://www.chicagotribune.com. (c) 2004, Chicago Tribune. Distributed by Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News. For information on republishing this content, contact us at (800) 661-2511 (U.S.), (213) 237-4914 (worldwide), fax (213) 237-65 ...
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Yushchenko poisoning tough to prove
Deseret News (Salt Lake City)
; KIEV, Ukraine -- Ukraine's outgoing government sought Monday to control the inquiry into the poisoning of presidential candidate Viktor Yushchenko, with officials close to the government taking charge of both investigations into who tried to harm or kill the leader of the "Orange Revolution." The
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Yushchenko sets agenda Momentum shifts from disputed vote
International Herald Tribune
; C.J. Chivers International Herald Tribune 12-31-2004 Viktor Yushchenko, the presumptive president-elect, has begun to draw up the shape and early priorities of Ukraine's next government, even as his opponent in Sunday's election continued to refuse to acknowledge defeat. Power could be felt
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Hopes for change propel Yushchenko's popularity
International Herald Tribune
; ... sunk, Yushchenko's own popularity has risen, as the government's efforts to demonize him have risen.The state-run news media, or news media owned by his rivals, have portrayed him as a radical and nationalist, and questioned whether his marriage to ...
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Yushchenko sworn in, hails win over tyranny.(WORLD)
The Washington Times
; Byline: Natalia A. Feduschak, THE WASHINGTON TIMES KIEV - Viktor Yushchenko took his oath of office as Ukraine's third post-Soviet president yesterday, calling his election a victory of freedom over tyranny and vowing the country will find its rightful place in Europe. Immediately after being sworn
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Ukraine reopens Yushchenko poisoning inquiry
Charleston Gazette
; KIEV, Ukraine - Ukrainian prosecutors reopened their investigation into allegations Viktor Yushchenko was poisoned after doctors treating the opposition leader confirmed he had been slipped the toxic chemical dioxin, as Yushchenko returned home Sunday to campaign for this month's presidential
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YUSHCHENKO'S CHALLENGES
The Boston Globe
; ... the range of its most powerful rockets and, through reverse engineering, the ability to arm missiles with nuclear warheads. The news of this sale has been greeted around the world with horror and surprise. Only 10 years ago the United States was showering Ukraine ...
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Yushchenko poisoning suggests plot Doctors 'clearly' see a 'third-party' role
International Herald Tribune
; Elisabeth Rosenthal International Herald Tribune 12-13-2004 Tests at a hospital in Vienna confirmed that Viktor Yushchenko, the Ukrainian opposition candidate, had been poisoned with dioxin, doctors said, providing an explanation for his painful and disfiguring condition during the past three
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Yushchenko pledges to reunite Ukraine Taking oath as president, he also praises people's 'beautiful and peaceful victory'
International Herald Tribune
; Steven Lee Myers International Herald Tribune 01-24-2005 Viktor Yushchenko, his face disfigured by poison and his fate nearly undone by electoral fraud, took the oath of office as president of Ukraine on Sunday, vowing to unite a poor and deeply divided country and lead it into the mainstream of
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Yushchenko checks in for more medical tests
International Herald Tribune
; ... politician in opposition,'' he said. ''The aim, naturally, was to kill me.'' Yushchenko's wife, a Ukrainian-American, told a U.S. news show Friday morning that she smelled poison on his breath the day before he fell ill. The pain-killing catheter in Yushchenko ...
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