Kiev Ukraine News Blog

Daily news and other information from the city made famous around the globe by the "Orange Revolution".

Friday, January 28, 2005

Cheney Dons Orange Tie for Yushchenko

KRAKOW, Poland - Vice President Dick Cheney voiced his support yesterday for Ukraine's new president, and his bright orange tie - symbolic of Viktor A. Yushchenko's Orange Revolution - drove home the message.

"The world has been inspired by the remarkable images emanating from Ukraine in recent months," Cheney said at a cultural center in Krakow, where the two met during a heavy snowstorm. "We have watched as Ukrainians, by the hundreds of thousands, converged on Kiev's Independence Square to preserve their freedom and safeguard their right to determine the destiny of their nation."


President Yushchenko and Vice President Dick Cheney


He said the Ukrainian people have shown the world the "unstoppable power of the popular will."

Yushchenko, who survived a nearly fatal poisoning to emerge victorious in a bitterly disputed election, faces a delicate juggling act, pushing for democratic reforms and aligning Ukraine with Europe while keeping fruitful relations with Russian President Vladimir V. Putin.

On Monday, Yushchenko smoothed relations with Putin in Moscow. Yesterday, he and Cheney stood side by side to publicly express mutual support.

Yushchenko mentioned Russia along with the United States, the European Union and Poland as strategic partners, but he and Cheney refrained from saying anything that might have provoked Putin, who will meet with President Bush during his trip to Europe next month.

"We want to pursue the processes of liberalization and democratization in all aspects of life that are so badly needed in Ukraine and other Eastern European nations, shoulder to shoulder with our partners," said Yushchenko, his chalky complexion scarred by the near-lethal dose of dioxin he ingested during the campaign.

"After the Orange Revolution, the country and the nation have changed," Yushchenko said. "Not only do we have an independent country, we have a free country - a country capable of pursing new, independent and responsible policy."

Initially, the two men were scheduled to have a brief meeting and then eat dinner. But their meeting lasted more than an hour - twice as long as scheduled - and they skipped dinner.

Cheney is on a three-day trip to southern Poland to celebrate the 60th anniversary of the liberation of the Nazi death camps at Auschwitz and Birkenau. The vice president's remarks with Yushchenko and at a reception with Holocaust survivors echoed President Bush's Inauguration Day call to overcome tyranny and foster democratic reform across the world.

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