Comedian Volodymyr Zelensky has been elected president of Ukraine twice - first as a character in the popular TV show Servant of the People, now for real. The 41-year-old performer's bid started out as a long shot but, on the back of popular discontent with the political class, he sent establishment candidates tumbling.
Supporters see the political novice as a breath of fresh air but critics say he is a puppet of powerful rivals to Ukraine's outgoing leader Petro Poroshenko. The story of his rise mirrored that of his character in the hit sitcom, which returned for its third season days before the first round of real-life voting last month.
In the show, a school history teacher is elected leader after a video rant against corruption goes viral. As a candidate, Zelensky has blurred the line between politics and entertainment.
He eschewed media interviews and traditional rallies, preferring to address voters via social networks and perform in gigs with his sketch troupe right up to the first stage of the vote.
Ukrainian media outlets signed an open letter in the final days of the campaign demanding that Zelensky respond to their questions and flesh out his vague manifesto.
But the father-of-two has embraced the fact his campaign has been light on solid pledges. One of the posters for his candidacy read: No promises - no apologies!
The entertainer has been compared with US actor-turned-president Ronald Reagan, Italian populist Beppe Grillo and current US leader Donald Trump.
Zelensky has been accused of being a front for the interests of controversial Ukrainian oligarch Igor Kolomoysky, who owns the channel on which the actor's shows are broadcast.
But the actor denied any political connection and in the last days of campaigning said the oligarch would be jailed if he was found to have violated any laws.
Kolomoysky, one of Ukraine's richest men, became a regional governor at the start of Poroshenko's term but was forced to resign following a row over a state oil firm. He now lives in Israel.
An investigative TV report at the start of the year meanwhile accused Zelensky of having commercial relations with Russia. This is a highly sensitive issue following Moscow's annexation of Crimea and its backing of separatist rebels in eastern Ukraine, in a conflict that has cost some 13,000 lives since 2014.
Following the broadcast, Zelensky confirmed he had shares in a Cypriot company that owns a Russian group and promised to sell them.
On the campaign trail, Poroshenko mocked the Ukrainian of his Russian-speaking rival and said he lacked the political chops to stand up to President Vladimir Putin.
Zelensky has insisted that as leader he would demand Putin end Moscow's occupation of Ukrainian territory and pay compensation for the conflict. And he has pledged to keep Kiev on the pro-Western course it charted under Poroshenko.
The diminutive performer, from the industrial city of Krivy Rig in central Ukraine, is a dollar millionaire.
He has a law degree but made his career in entertainment, turning his Kvartal 95 comedy troupe into big business. The group has toured in Russia and he has performed in Russian films.
Zelensky is of Jewish descent but has said that religion is a personal matter and it played no part in his campaign.
Top Comments
Disclaimer & comment rulesUkrainians have literally elected a guy who plays a president on TV...
Apr 22nd, 2019 - 06:14 pm 0Do they even understand he is not his character?
DT
Apr 23rd, 2019 - 10:46 pm 0Continuing Brazil's lower house speaker...
No, never got to visit Angola and Moçambique. Too dangerous. The civil wars (Angola, 1975 / Moçambique, 1977) started soon after independence from Portugal (1975), and were basically the continuation of the wars for independence, and which pitted former freedom groups against each other.
The civil wars were secondary ones within a larger context of the cold war, with the USSR ‘n Cuba, vs the USA.
In the 70s I met quite a few Portuguese businessmen who fled from Angola and Moçambique…they could see the civil unrest getting worse, with the deterioration of the rule of law, and most had prepared themselves for a quick getaway, knowing well that if they stayed on, they'd probably be killed.
They didn't have much choice, so they lost all their property, businesses, and some lost family members ‘n friends…their stories were nasty, pretty horrible.
But since discontent was already boiling over before independence, I can imagine it only got worse after they got it.
Mowing/swimming : - a sore body, but a satisfied mind.
Just one more reply, to catch up.
Wow, I didn't know the civil wars had gone on so long. 27 years in Angola! It must be pretty awful having to leave behind your whole life, and a business you've put a lot of effort into and spent a long time building, and start again. And horrible in a different way for the people who had to stay in the country and live (or not) through the wars. Brazil had a war for independence, but nothing as bad as those two countries, thankfully.
Apr 24th, 2019 - 03:19 pm 0a sore body, but a satisfied mind
Yes, it's a good feeling having accomplished something, and the garden looks a lot better now. I did the edging and trimming on Monday and made a good start on the giant weeds. Here's part of the lawn, it's not just that it's steep, it's really uneven and the Flymo catches on all the lumps:
https://i.imgur.com/Ds3MbGH.jpg
Here's one of the alarming cracks, the blades on those choppers are about as long as the handles:
i.imgur.com/Ij7HNjx.jpg
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