Anti-Tymoshenko party hires top PR firm in EU capital
27.04.12 @ 18:31
BRUSSELS - Ukraine's ruling Party of Regions (PoR) has hired Burson-Marsteller - a top PR company in Brussels - amid a smear campaign against former prime minister Yulia Tymoshenko.
Robert Mack, a senior manager at Burson-Marsteller, told EUobserver: "Our brief is to help the PoR communicate its activities as the governing party of Ukraine, as well as to help it explain better its position on the Yulia Tymoshenko case." One of his staff said it was hired "several weeks ago."
Its tasks include setting up press interviews for Ukraine's deputy prosecutor general, Renat Kuzmin, when he visits the EU capital next week.
Kuzmin in the Financial Times on 1 April accused Tymoshenko of involvement in a 1990s contract killing. On a visit to Brussels in November he accused her of buying "cars, furs, jewellery, restaurants" while declaring a tiny income.
A Tymoshenko party ally, Hyorhiy Nemyria, told this website the PoR-Kuzmin link violates Kuzmin's status as an independent jurist: "It's just one more confirmation that this is a political case and that Kuzmin is a loyal servant of President Yanukovych."
Martin Nunn, a British national who runs Whites Communication, a PR firm in Kiev, said he has written to the UK's Crown Prosecution Service to ask if Burson-Marsteller, which has an office in London, is in violation of the UK bribery act. "This can be perceived as an act of bribery on the part of the Party of Regions as Kuzmin is getting PR benefit as a gift from PoR," he said.
For his part, Mack noted: "The deputy prosecutor general is a logical person to speak about the facts surrounding the Tymoshenko case."
A senior aide to President Viktor Yanukovych, Anna Herman, told this website that his chancellery knows nothing about his party's PR work: "We have nothing to do with it and we don't have any information about it."
Referring to allegations that Tymoshenko was beaten up by prison guards last Friday (20 April), Herman added: "If it's not one thing, she'll invent another. I don't like scandals and I don't like scandalous women."
The Burson-Marsteller contract comes amid a wider effort to blacken Tymoshenko's name.
In 2010, Yanukovych hired US firms Kroll, Trout Cacheris and Akin Gump Strauss Hauer & Feld to find evidence of corruption. Last week, anonymous sources circulated a blurry video clip to Ukrainian media purporting to show her in her prison cell faking back ache and cuddling with her lawyer, Sergei Vlasenko.
Nemyria said the clip is a fabrication. He noted that it shows her using her left hand to do her hair even though she is right-handed.
Tymoshenko was jailed last year on charges of abuse of office in a trial denounced by EU diplomats as "selective justice." She is currently in the seventh day of a hunger strike in protest at the alleged beating.
The case threatens to damage prospects of the EU signing a political association and trade pact with Ukraine later this year - a development with geopolitical implications for EU-Ukraine-Russia relations.
Nemyria said Ukraine's human rights ombudsman, Nina Karpachyova, met with EU diplomats in Kiev on Friday to show them photos of bruises on Tymoshenko's body resulting from the alleged beating.
He said the presidents of Austria, the Czech Republic and Germany have declined to go to Yanukovych's summit of central European leaders in May in protest.
EU foreign affairs chief Catherine Ashton has urged Kiev to "examine promptly and impartially any complaints of torture or other forms of cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment" and to give the EU ambassador to Ukraine access to Tymoshenko.
Robert Mack, a senior manager at Burson-Marsteller, told EUobserver: "Our brief is to help the PoR communicate its activities as the governing party of Ukraine, as well as to help it explain better its position on the Yulia Tymoshenko case." One of his staff said it was hired "several weeks ago."
Its tasks include setting up press interviews for Ukraine's deputy prosecutor general, Renat Kuzmin, when he visits the EU capital next week.
Kuzmin in the Financial Times on 1 April accused Tymoshenko of involvement in a 1990s contract killing. On a visit to Brussels in November he accused her of buying "cars, furs, jewellery, restaurants" while declaring a tiny income.
A Tymoshenko party ally, Hyorhiy Nemyria, told this website the PoR-Kuzmin link violates Kuzmin's status as an independent jurist: "It's just one more confirmation that this is a political case and that Kuzmin is a loyal servant of President Yanukovych."
Martin Nunn, a British national who runs Whites Communication, a PR firm in Kiev, said he has written to the UK's Crown Prosecution Service to ask if Burson-Marsteller, which has an office in London, is in violation of the UK bribery act. "This can be perceived as an act of bribery on the part of the Party of Regions as Kuzmin is getting PR benefit as a gift from PoR," he said.
For his part, Mack noted: "The deputy prosecutor general is a logical person to speak about the facts surrounding the Tymoshenko case."
A senior aide to President Viktor Yanukovych, Anna Herman, told this website that his chancellery knows nothing about his party's PR work: "We have nothing to do with it and we don't have any information about it."
Referring to allegations that Tymoshenko was beaten up by prison guards last Friday (20 April), Herman added: "If it's not one thing, she'll invent another. I don't like scandals and I don't like scandalous women."
The Burson-Marsteller contract comes amid a wider effort to blacken Tymoshenko's name.
In 2010, Yanukovych hired US firms Kroll, Trout Cacheris and Akin Gump Strauss Hauer & Feld to find evidence of corruption. Last week, anonymous sources circulated a blurry video clip to Ukrainian media purporting to show her in her prison cell faking back ache and cuddling with her lawyer, Sergei Vlasenko.
Nemyria said the clip is a fabrication. He noted that it shows her using her left hand to do her hair even though she is right-handed.
Tymoshenko was jailed last year on charges of abuse of office in a trial denounced by EU diplomats as "selective justice." She is currently in the seventh day of a hunger strike in protest at the alleged beating.
The case threatens to damage prospects of the EU signing a political association and trade pact with Ukraine later this year - a development with geopolitical implications for EU-Ukraine-Russia relations.
Nemyria said Ukraine's human rights ombudsman, Nina Karpachyova, met with EU diplomats in Kiev on Friday to show them photos of bruises on Tymoshenko's body resulting from the alleged beating.
He said the presidents of Austria, the Czech Republic and Germany have declined to go to Yanukovych's summit of central European leaders in May in protest.
EU foreign affairs chief Catherine Ashton has urged Kiev to "examine promptly and impartially any complaints of torture or other forms of cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment" and to give the EU ambassador to Ukraine access to Tymoshenko.