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Author Topic: Ukraine's Facebook Warriors  (Read 3851 times)

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Offline AkMike

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Ukraine's Facebook Warriors
« on: December 29, 2014, 01:46:20 PM »
At an army checkpoint near the occupied city of Donetsk in eastern Ukraine, Lt. Col. Natalia Semeniuk approached a convoy of two minibuses that had just arrived from Kiev. Slung over her shoulder was an AK-47 assault rifle. Clumps of long, brown hair poked out from beneath the beanie she wore to guard against the cold, which had dropped to about minus-20 degrees Fahrenheit.

Colonel Semeniuk was meeting with Anna Sandalova, a former public relations executive and a founder of Help the Army of Ukraine, a foundation that uses Facebook to raise money to buy equipment for Ukraine’s desperately underfunded army. Ms. Sandalova has become something of a star in her country, especially to its soldiers. She supplies them with everything from body armor to night-vision goggles, to sleeping bags and food. Since her group was established in March, it has raised over $1.3 million, Ms. Sandalova told me, for the fight against the pro-Russian separatists who have occupied large parts of eastern Ukraine.

An overwhelming majority of the money is crowdfunded from the Ukrainian people through Facebook. The process is simple: Ms. Sandalova liaises with army divisions fighting in the field. They tell her what they need and she posts their requests to Facebook. People donate via bank transfer into the foundation’s account, and Ms. Sandalova and her colleagues then drive the goods to eastern Ukraine personally.

That day, the minibuses were filled to bursting. Clad in body armor and a helmet, Ms. Sandalova followed Colonel Semeniuk to a Ukrainian Army camp in the forest near Donetsk to make her first delivery. Canvas tents dotted the area, erected among thickets of trees covered with snow. Soldiers huddled together, talking and smoking. Some helped unload several mobile shower units.

Dozens of these volunteer groups have sprung up as the fighting has intensified. “It’s all about networks,” Ms. Sandalova explained. “Facebook is perfect for our needs because it allows us as individuals to become greater than the sum of our parts. It allows us to form communities that can achieve things that would otherwise be impossible for civilians.”

Ms. Sandalova makes deliveries to soldiers in various divisions throughout the war zone and the reaction is always the same: delight. She has a policy of kissing soldiers who are single. At a camp near the front lines, a soldier in his early 20s went bright red when Ms. Sandalova kissed him roundly on the cheek to roars of approval from his comrades. After two days, the minibuses were empty.

Ms. Sandalova is modest about her role. “It’s the power of social media,” she said simply.

She’s not wrong. Ask a Ukrainian where to find the most reliable source of military news and most likely they’ll point you not to the Ministry of Defense website but to “Information Resistance,” a widely read analytical review, also on Facebook. Want to know what contracts the government is taking bids on? Easy, check out the Facebook page of the civil society group “Reanimation Package of Reforms.”

Continue reading the main story Continue reading the main story

Continue reading the main story

The Euromaidan revolution that overthrew President Viktor F. Yanukovych in February galvanized Ukraine’s people. It showed them what they could do. Civil society, not government, now leads the way, especially when it combines with social media, which is tailor-made for the post-Soviet space, where institutions have atrophied from years of Communist rule. All you need is a laptop and a Facebook account, and you can take action.

Crucially, everything Ms. Sandalova does is quick. Using official government channels requires various permissions, which often takes time that simply isn’t available when people are at war. “We are not a government department facing endless bureaucracy,” she said. “We just don’t have these problems.”

And stultifying bureaucracy is the least of the government’s problems. The catalyst for the Euromaidan revolution may have been Mr. Yanukovych’s failure to sign the European Union association agreement, but its root cause was popular disgust at two decades of ubiquitous corruption.

It is hard to overestimate the scale of the problem. In its 2013 Corruption Perceptions Index, the independent research organization Transparency International ranked Ukraine 144th, tied with the Central African Republic and below Kazakhstan.

Nowhere is corruption more prevalent than in the military. The Ukrainian Army is the state in miniature. It emerged, like the country, from the Soviet Union in 1991 — huge, but bloated and rotting inside. Corruption has stymied progress since independence.

According to the English-language Ukrainian newspaper The Kyiv Post, Ukraine’s military budget for 2014 was about 3.4 percent of gross domestic product, and much disappears into the pockets of corrupt officials. Promotion through the ranks is dependent not on ability but on bribery; soldiers are trained not in the art of war, but of theft. Parts, weapons, even uniforms are all up for sale.

The Congressional Research Service reported that in 2014, the European Union announced an 11.1-billion-euro ($15.5-billion) aid package for Ukraine, while Congress approved $1 billion in loan guarantees to go with over $184 million in aid to the Ukrainian government for “political and economic reforms.” Much of this money will be stolen, even more wasted.

The international strategy is wrong. Ukrainian civil society in all its forms is increasingly doing what the state cannot. Where the state fails to deliver, the people make up the difference; where it is slow and flabby, they are quick and lean.

The United States and the European Union should set aside greater aid, funding and expertise that bypasses Ukraine’s sclerotic and corrupt government and goes directly to the country’s major civil society groups. Ukraine is fighting a war in which 21st-century means have emerged that often enable networks of citizens, empowered by social media, to outperform the state. The lesson from the ground is clear: To defeat the separatists, fund Ukraine’s people, not just its government.
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/12/30/opinion/ukraines-facebook-warriors.html?smid=tw-share&_r=1


Offline JayH

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Re: Ukraine's Facebook Warriors
« Reply #1 on: December 29, 2014, 06:57:21 PM »
facebook.com/anna.sandalova
SLAVA UKRAYINI  ! HEROYAM SLAVA!!!!
Слава Украине! Слава героям слава!Слава Україні! Слава героям!
 translated as: Glory to Ukraine! Glory to the heroes!!!  is a Ukrainian greeting slogan being used now all over Ukraine to signify support for a free independent Ukraine

Offline Shadow

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Re: Ukraine's Facebook Warriors
« Reply #2 on: December 30, 2014, 02:38:43 AM »
So where does the money go that the US and EU are giving for the Ukrainian army?  :cluebat:
No it is not a dog. Its really how I look.  ;)

Offline mendeleyev

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Re: Ukraine's Facebook Warriors
« Reply #3 on: December 30, 2014, 10:05:02 AM »
Quote
So where does the money go that the US and EU are giving for the Ukrainian army?

Oh dear, Shadow. You really do need to shed that Soviet mentality that everyone is crooked. Relax, and live my friend. Corruption dies hard where it is protected, but there is democracy and transparency.


The Mendeleyev Journal. http://mendeleyevjournal.com Member: Congress of Russian Journalists; ЖУРНАЛИСТЫ.RU (Journalist-Russia); ЖУРНАЛИСТЫ.UA (Journalist-Ukraine); ЖУРНАЛИСТЫ.KZ (Journalist-Kazakhstan); ПОРТАЛ ЖУРНАЛИСТОВ (Portal of RU-UA Journalists); Просто Журналисты ("Just Journalists").

Offline AkMike

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Re: Ukraine's Facebook Warriors
« Reply #4 on: December 31, 2014, 01:44:57 AM »
 Yesterday on the marshrutka ride into Kyiv for the holidays we were joined by 2 soldiers from the Donbass volunteer battalion. They were on the way to Kyiv for more training before heading down to the ATO area.
 
 We offered to buy their tickets as a thank you for their service to the country. They were a bit embarrassed but accepted the offer.  As a token of their appreciation one gave me the UA emblem from his hat during a rest stop.
 It will be remembered by all for some time.  I will treasure the emblem for many years.

 Slava Ukraine!  :clapping:

lordtiberius

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Re: Ukraine's Facebook Warriors
« Reply #5 on: December 31, 2014, 09:50:20 AM »
In 10 years, mark my words these people will lead Europe.

Offline JayH

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Re: Ukraine's Facebook Warriors
« Reply #6 on: January 02, 2015, 03:17:44 AM »
Another way to help Ukraine--

Quoting
"Still needed is not so much in terms of money 1000 UAH. Collect 8000 need for what ?, fuel - 2.5 t, 3t products, medicines and 1.5 to 1m with you (just in case), it will be purchased a couple of days before departure. I recently met a 39 BTU fighters, they are now at the very forefront. Decided to them "ride guys very pryvitlyvo we met, they are not discouraged, joking and promise victory!
Like all teams they have animals that live with them, but these guys could even tame duck named Zhorik, so funny))) Now they need our support to you, because I and my friend Oleg about "yednuyemosya order to help these soldiers!
 Requirements: 1. Warm clothes - sweaters, fleece jackets (can be / in, take over and bring home cabinet warrior) + 2. Thermo - 15 give 3. Gloves - 20 + 4. Insoles r.41,42,43,44,45 - 2 + 5. Warm socks - 20 + 6. Underwear XL, XXL - 10 + 7. Winter pants or overalls military - 15 + 8. LED 60W - 10 + 9. Plastic Bowl 15L - 1 10. Cigarettes - a lot - PART give 11. Disposable tableware (deep bowl) - 500 + 12. Flashlights - 5 + 13. Hygiene - machines and foam, wet wipes, soap + 14. Food - Canned m "clear, fish, salad borsch, Supa, cereals, tea, coffee, vegetables, fruits and others. 15. Medication - still needed for colds and vitamins Need vitamminna mix - raisins, dried apricots, prunes, nuts, honey lemon.
Who has the opportunity to help do - write. New Year is coming, all are preparing to celebrate svyata..budete a homely atmosphere, warm people with family nearby. We should fix forget that there are those who will celebrate this year New Year in the trenches .. So celebrate peace in heaven, do not forget who it protects you! We can support them, it will be thanks for their courage in the struggle for victory.
 Help together all things are possible Write letters to our soldiers with words of gratitude and support to the lust.soldatu@mail.ru , and then I have to print out and pass on.
If you yourself can buy something from a list - write me http://vk.com/anet_stk in LS, give the address where to send. Private Bank Card 5168 7556 0223 5091 Oleg Barabash If you have questions, please contact: http://vk.com/anet_stk , 063 184 39 35 Anna http://vk.com/barolegar , 066 443 57 93 093 004 30 33 Oleg
All reports will be Oleg page "in the header" Please repost to spread, thanks! PS reports and previous trips"

END QUOTE

Please forward and post.
SLAVA UKRAYINI  ! HEROYAM SLAVA!!!!
Слава Украине! Слава героям слава!Слава Україні! Слава героям!
 translated as: Glory to Ukraine! Glory to the heroes!!!  is a Ukrainian greeting slogan being used now all over Ukraine to signify support for a free independent Ukraine

 

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