2014 Ukrainian Maidan Revolt: News, Views, Photos & Videos

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The problem is that China isn't Switzerland...

Huh.

UnionPay card accounts for 7.7% of all Payment Card Transaction in year 2013, third largest and fastest growing worldwide. See Nilson Report

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Bottom line is American Card Payment companies will act against Russian national interest and should be avoided whenever possible. Never hurt to have more choices.
 
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TerraN_EmpirE

Tyrant King
Well guys As if this Ukrainian Crisis was not already a Three Ring Circus...
Stop the Crimea Mcdonalds Wants out!
McDonald's quits Crimea as fears of trade clash grow
Photo
Fri, Apr 4 2014
By Natalia Zinets
KIEV (Reuters) - McDonald's announced on Friday it had closed its restaurants in Crimea, prompting fears of a backlash as a prominent Moscow politician called for all the U.S. fast food chain's outlets in Russia to be shut.
Crimea's annexation by Russia, which Ukraine and the West do not acknowledge, has worried companies with assets in the Black Sea peninsula as it is unclear how the change may impact their business.
While McDonald's did not mention the political situation in its statement, its decision to leave the region is likely to be seen as emblematic of the rift in Western-Russian relations, now at their lowest ebb since the end of the Cold War.
"Due to operational reasons beyond our control, McDonald's has taken the decision to temporarily close our three restaurants in Simferopol, Sevastopol and Yalta," a spokeswoman said.
The Crimean outlets are not franchises, but owned and operated by McDonald's itself.
The closures follow Geneva-based Universal Postal Deutsche Post's (DPWGn.DE: Quote, Profile, Research, Stock Buzz) announcement that it was no longer accepting letters bound for Crimea as delivery to the region was no longer guaranteed.
Economic relations between Russia and Ukraine have worsened since Russia annexed Crimea last month in response to the ousting of Russian-backed president Viktor Yanukovich after months of street protests in Kiev.
Targeted sanctions imposed on a number of prominent Russians by the United States and the European Union have alarmed some foreign investors.
Russia raised the price it charges Ukraine for gas on Thursday for the second time this week, almost doubling it in three days and piling pressure on its neighbor as it teeters on the brink of bankruptcy.
Moscow has frequently used energy as a political weapon in dealing with its neighbors, and European customers are now concerned Russia might again cut off deliveries.
ECONOMIC PRESSURE
Moscow is applying economic pressure in other areas, while Ukraine has responded.
Russian riot police last month took control of a factory belonging to a Ukrainian confectionery magnate in the city of Lipetsk as part of an investigation into the company's affairs, the Ukrainian government has said.
Petro Poroshenko, a billionaire oligarch known as the "Chocolate King", is the front-runner in Ukraine's presidential election, which is set for May 25.
Ukraine this week temporarily banned seven Russian food companies from selling some of their products on Ukrainian territory.
McDonald's (MCD.N: Quote, Profile, Research, Stock Buzz) said it hoped to resume work as soon as possible but said it would help relocate staff to work in mainland Ukraine, signaling it did not expect its Crimean businesses to reopen in the near future.
The company's decision was welcomed by the deputy speaker of the Russian parliament, Vladimir Zhirinovsky, known for his anti-Western rhetoric, who demanded that McDonald's pull its business out of Russia entirely.
"It would be good if they closed here too ... if they disappeared for good. Pepsi-Cola would be next," Russian media quoted Zhirinovsky as saying. (PEP.N: Quote, Profile, Research, Stock Buzz)
Zhirinovsky, whose nationalist Liberal Democratic party largely backs President Vladimir Putin in parliament, said the party would organize pickets at McDonald's restaurants across the country.
McDonald's, which currently operates more than 400 restaurants in Russia, was the first international fast-food chain to tap the Russian market when it opened in Moscow's Pushkin Square before the collapse of the Soviet Union.
That branch had the highest sales and served the most customers of any McDonald's outlet in 2012.
A Russian backlash again McDonald's products would have a significant impact on company profits. McDonald's sees Russia as one of its top seven major markets outside the United States and Canada, according to its 2013 annual report.
However Russian moves to shun McDonald's burgers could easily backfire, according to Russian newswire RBK, which detailed Russian food suppliers to McDonald's that would suffer as a result.
(Reporting by Natalia Zinets, Alessandra Prentice; Additional reporting by Elizabeth Piper; Editing by Giles Elgood)
Word is The new Russian Fast food restaurant Chain McPutin's is rapidly opening stores in the Crimea.

Out Own Senior Moderator BD Popeye has apparently thrown his hat in to the ring. or at least he tried....
4 April 2014 Last updated at 04:41 ET
Ukraine: 'Darth Vader' presidency bid rejected
News from Elsewhere...
By News from Elsewhere...
...media reports from around the world, found by BBC Monitoring
Ukrainian authorities have rejected a bid from a man calling himself Darth Vader, who wants to run in the presidential elections.
The man, who appears in the costume of the fictional character from the Star Wars films and is often accompanied by people dressed in other Star Wars outfits, was nominated for the presidency by the Internet Party of Ukraine. Earlier he told the party's congress that he wanted to turn Ukraine into "a galactic empire".
But the country's Central Electoral Commission says parts of Darth Vader's application were "questionable" and some paperwork was probably forged. Apparently, the man is really an electrician called Viktor Shevchenko, who changed his name to Darth Vader in March.
But at least one commission member suggests Darth Vader's campaign could be an attempt to discredit the upcoming election - possibly by Russia, which does not recognise the Ukraine's interim government. "It may seem like an innocent joke, but someone paid 2.5m hryvnyas ($227,000) for this joke," says Ihor Zhydenko, referring to the deposit that must be given along with the application.
Zhydenko adds that Darth Vader might run for the presidency in Russia, where he has received extensive media coverage. "They already have little green men," he says, referring to Russian troops in the Crimea region. "Such a commander-in-chief would be appropriate."
Twenty-three candidates have been registered to run in the snap presidential election in Ukraine on 25 May. The election was called after President Viktor Yanukovych was ousted following months of protests.
The Softer side of the Dark side....
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advill

Junior Member
Like in major crisis in any country, the invader would Analyze (political. economic, social cultural, technological & security/military) in short the PESTS Analyses, and then Strategize accordingly. Putin and his cohorts did just that - nothing difficult for Russia, as they were able to arouse nationalistic feelings. The Russians carried a BIG stick in case of intervention by outside powers, who unfortunately quite commonly known as a force with "No Action Talk Only". Not difficult for anyone to comprehend, IF we learn from histories of WW II in Europe and Asia.


"Once Russian troops had moved to blockade Ukrainian military personnel in their bases, psychological warfare, internet/media propaganda, intimidation, and bribery were their main weapons to undermine their opponents' will to resist, rather than overwhelming firepower. Russian troops also displayed considerably discipline and patience during this phase."
according to
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I noticed the Russians played it real cool (the above sentence in boldface), but I didn't want to look like a speaking-trumpet of Russian propaganda LOL

Anyway, that's the first article I saw in a respected Western source, which, to me, seems to acknowledge the Russian success from "tactical point of view".
 

TerraN_EmpirE

Tyrant King
Because its still a American company, and the USA called the Crimean annexation illegal. Besides the Russians were in such a Rush (pun partially intended) that just about everything not done under Russian planing was left to catch up on its own.
Besides this way Fearless Leader Vladimir Putin, finally has a Job that even Boris and Natasha can't screw up ;D
Now Serving Moose and Squirrel...

Gee Bullwinkle I don't know about this one.

sure it will be fine Rocky or my name isn't Bullwinkle J Moose.
 
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Kurt

Junior Member
There is hardly a report about the scale of the pro-Russian protests. If there are numbers, than these are selective in a way that does not tell the total size, but only the numbers of few very active participants. These give nice media coverage for further Russian intervention and in their tactics seem to emulate the prior protests toppling the gouvernment of Yanukovich.
Reports, such as the one about McDonalds in Crimea, are noise that drowns out an eerie silence about real events on the ground. There is something going on and I'm not sure most Ukrainians are opposed to a Russian intervention and total annexiation. What seems pretty certain, Ukrainians are opposed to the current state of affairs under self-serving oligarchs, like the current "top candidate" for president and others.
The EU is pumping money into the region to improve the situation for their integration of this country, while Russia drains money out of Ukraine in order to destabilise the situation by keeping or worsening the status quo. Seems like a game only Russia can win. How long will the next stage take, until the whole of Ukraine becomes Russian?
 
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