Protests for hire in former Soviet world
It looked like the soul of democracy, a repeat of the 2004 Orange
Revolution: high-spirited, flag-waving demonstrators on Kiev's central
square decrying an attack on the constitution.
A few hours before, they had been a train full of kids gushing over
how they would spend their pay for protesting.
The scene from Ukraine's latest political crisis in April reflected
an open secret in the former Soviet world: protests taken in the West as
signs of grassroots political passion are often more a matter of dollars
and cents.
Oleksander Chernenko, an activist from an independent voter advocacy
group, the Committee of Ukrainian Voters, saw it from the inside,
infiltrating a trainload of paid protestors supporting Russian-backed
Prime Minister Viktor Yanukovych's Regions party in April.
"About 20 percent of them had come with genuine convictions -- but
that doesn't mean they didn't take the money," said Chernenko, who posed
as a protestor from the Yanukovych stronghold of Donetsk to board the
train. He later published a report on the trip with photographic
evidence from the train and the protest.
Party organisers paid hundreds of young people, most in their late
teens and early 20s, 130 gryvnias (26 dollars) each for an overnight
protest in Kiev, Chernenko said.
"They all talked about the money very openly," along with the excuses
they had used to get out of work or school.
The practice -- which provoked a nationwide investigation by the
prosecutor general into the illegal recruitment of children under 18 --
is hardly unique to Ukraine.
In Kyrgyzstan, a former Soviet state often called Central Asia's most
open democracy, opposition rallies in April were filled with protestors
bussed in from rural towns, many of whom had trouble explaining to AFP
reporters why they were there.
Mukhamed, who was camped out in a traditional nomadic tent on the
main square of the Kyrgyz capital Bishkek, complained about poverty in
his native city of Naryn. But he gave a gold-toothed grin when asked
whether his protest had come at a price. "How many of us do you think
would be out here if we weren't being paid?" he told AFP.
AFP
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