Petro Poroshenko
© AP Photo/ Virginia Mayo
Praising the EU's decision to lift visa restrictions for Ukrainian citizens, President Petro Poroshenko declared that the visa-free travel regime was equivalent to a "divorce from the Russian Empire." He seems to have forgotten that the Russian Empire actually dissolved a century ago, and that Ukraine has been independent for a quarter century.

On Thursday, the European Council approved a measure granting citizens of Ukraine 90-day visa-free travel within the bloc. The Council specified that both it and the EU Parliament still need to sign the measure. Kiev expects this to occur in Strasbourg next week. After that it will take another three weeks for the agreement to enter into force.

European officials added an important caveat to the agreement, specifying that Brussels can cancel the EU-Ukraine visa-free regime at any time if problems with migration or security arise.

Unable to contain his excitement, Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko told television channel 1+1 that the visa-free deal had immense, historical, epoch-making implications.

"I would say that today Ukraine has finalized its divorce from the Russian Empire; it is in this philosophical way that we must perceive this," he declared.

The president added that the visa-free regime "returns Ukraine to its historical place as a part of Europe."

Observers couldn't help but scratch their heads in amazement over the number of historical and logical errors packed into these couple of sentences. To begin with, the 'Russian Empire' has been defunct since the February Revolution of March 1917 - over a century ago. Its centenary is being marked this year.

Soldiers of the 1917 February Revolution. Petrograd streets.
© SputnikSoldiers of the 1917 February Revolution. Petrograd streets.
Secondly, if Poroshenko was talking about gaining 'independence from Moscow', Ukraine has been independent from Russia for over a quarter century, since December 1991, when the Soviet Union was broken up (under the initiative of Russian leader Boris Yeltsin, incidentally).

Furthermore, whether under the Russian Empire, as part of the Soviet Union, or since its independence, Ukraine has always been classified as being a 'part of Europe', just like its neighbors Belarus and Russia.
Russian President Boris Yeltsin (right) talks to the Ukrainian President Leonid Kravchuk (left) while on a walk in Dagomys park. 1992
© Sputnik/ Dmitryi DonskoyRussian President Boris Yeltsin (right) talks to the Ukrainian President Leonid Kravchuk (left) while on a walk in Dagomys park. 1992.
It also remains unclear what 'historical place' in Europe President Poroshenko was referring to. The only times all or part of Ukraine was formally considered being part of Europe in the geopolitical sense was when it was controlled by Germany during the First and Second World Wars, and before that, when part of its territory was controlled by the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth and 20th century interwar Poland.

In the same interview, Poroshenko made several more ill-considered remarks, saying for example that he thought that the visa-free regime with the EU would help entice the people of Crimea and the Donbass to 'return to Ukraine'.

"When we talk about the return of the occupied territories by political and diplomatic means, this means creating conditions for residents which would make them interested in returning to Ukraine and getting Ukrainian passports," the president said.

"When reforms are being carried out in Ukraine, when an association agreement [with Brussels] has been ratified, when real steps are being taken to increase the country's investment prospects, when every citizen has the right...to travel freely without visas, this is an additional motivation," he added.

But Crimeans themselves say they would never trade their status as part of Russia for the opportunity to travel to the EU without visas. Speaking to RIA Novosti, Zaur Smirnov, head of the Crimean Republic's committee on ethnic relations, said that the referendum of March 2014 showed pretty conclusively that Crimeans are not interested in Ukraine's 'European prospects'.

"Ukrainian authorities forgot one thing: that Crimeans will never trade their historical homeland, to which they sought to return for such a long time. For Crimeans, the return of Crimea to Russia has not only historical significance, but has also become a powerful factor for our region's social and economic development," Smirnov stressed.

Crimea broke off from Ukraine and rejoined Russia in March 2014, following the Euromaidan coup in Kiev in February of that year. Concerned by the new Ukrainian authorities' threats against the Russian minority, Crimean officials organized a referendum on the peninsula's status. Amid voter turnout of over 80%, more than 95% of Crimea's residents voted in favor of rejoining Russia, almost 60 years after it was first handed over to the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic by Nikita Khrushchev in 1954.

Pro-Russian people celebrate in Lenin Square, in Simferopol, Ukraine, Sunday, March 16, 2014.
© AP Photo/ Vadim GhirdaPro-Russian people celebrate in Lenin Square, in Simferopol, Ukraine, Sunday, March 16, 2014.
When it comes to the Donbass, it was Kiev that initiated a series of restrictive measures, including an economic blockade of the breakaway territories, thus helping to ensure that the region's residents don't want to rejoin Ukraine. Furthermore, Ukrainian authorities have also rejected calls to comply with the Minsk agreements, including constitutional reforms which would be necessary to reintegrate the breakaways. In this context, Poroshenko's words about 'enticing' the Donbass using the EU visa-free regime make little sense.

In Ukraine itself, not everyone is eager about the prospects that the visa-free agreement will provide. Pro-EU Fatherland Party leader Yulia Tymoshenko admitted that only 10-15% of Ukrainians will be able to take advantage of visa-free travel.

"The Ukrainian people have been brought to a point where we have become one of the ten poorest countries on earth; this is nonsense for a European country! This means that this visa-free agreement that we have endured so much to attain can be taken advantage of by a maximum of 10-15% of Ukrainians; this is shown by sociological research," Tymoshenko said, speaking to Ukraine's ZIK TV.

Indeed, national statistics suggest that more Ukrainians will probably be spending their time abroad working than leaving the country for vacations and pleasure trips. It's estimated that up to 2.1 million Ukrainians are working in Russia, with up to a million more living and working in Poland. Several hundred thousand more Ukrainians have also fled poverty and the war in eastern Ukraine to other countries, mostly in Europe.