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==The civic youth organization== Pora! was inspired and partly trained by members of the [[Serbia]]n [[Otpor!|Otpor]] movement which helped bring down President [[Slobodan Milošević]], and is also allied to related movements throughout [[Eastern Europe]], including [[Kmara]] in the republic of [[Georgia (country)|Georgia]] (itself partly responsible for the downfall of President [[Eduard Shevardnadze]]), [[Zubr (political organization)|Zubr]] in [[Belarus]] (opposing President [[Alexander Lukashenko]]), [[Oborona]] in [[Russia]], and [[MJAFT!]] in [[Albania]]. According to Pora! has never received U.S. funding and that while 10 members traveled to Serbia in the spring of 2004 and met with Otpor leaders at a seminar in the city of [[Novi Sad]], they paid for themselves. Prior to the [[2004 Ukrainian presidential election|2004 presidential election]], pro-democracy movements such as Pora! had created political networks throughout Ukraine, including 150 groups responsible for spreading information and coordinating election monitoring, 72 regional centers, and 30,000 registered participants. This allowed Pora! to mobilize protesters after widespread reports of electoral fraud.<ref>[[Thomas Kalil|Kalil, Thomas]]. (2008) Harnessing the Mobile Revolution. The New Policy Institute. Pg 14</ref> Pora! supported [[Viktor Yushchenko]] in [[protest]]s following the disputed 2004 presidential election. It claimed to have about 10,000 members. Its methods have apparently been influenced by [[Gene Sharp]]'s manual ''[[From Dictatorship to Democracy]]''. Apart from the mass demonstrations of the "[[Orange Revolution]]", the group's tactics have included the use of visually striking posters showing confrontational images such as a giant boot crushing a cockroach, and stickers with "revolutionary" slogans such as "Time to Arise!". Not surprisingly, this has aroused the ire of the Ukrainian authorities and Pora! activists have often been harassed and arrested. Pora! activists were arrested in October 2004, but the release of many (on what was reported [[President of Ukraine|President]] [[Leonid Kuchma]]'s personal order) gave growing confidence to the opposition.<ref>[https://books.google.com/books?id=BxOQKrCe7UUC&pg=PA345 Civil Resistance and Power Politics: The Experience of Non-violent Action from Gandhi to the Present] edited by Adam Roberts and Timothy Garton Ash, [[Oxford University Press]], 2009, {{ISBN|978-0-19-955201-6}} (page 345)</ref> Pora! was seen as being on the radical wing of the reform movement.
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