A、now have the freedom B、are now afraid C、have always had the freedom D、have no freedom A

admin2011-02-11  28

问题  
During the Orange Revolution, Viktor Yushchenko’s name echoed across Kiev’s Independence Square as hundreds of thousands of Ukrainians reversed a fraudulent presidential election and put Mr. Yushchenko in office. But after just nine months, the President’s Chief of Staff resigned, after leveling corruption charges against the highest levels of the new administration. The ensuing crisis has disenchanted many in Ukraine.
  Expressing disappointment with politicians, however, is something ordinary Ukrainians did not have freedom to do in the past. For centuries, Ukrainian political rivalries were hidden from the public or led to bloody social upheavals. According to Ukrainian historian Orest Subtelny of York University in Toronto, Canada, the current crisis is unusual in Ukraine’s history, but not in the history of democracies.

选项 A、now have the freedom
B、are now afraid
C、have always had the freedom
D、have no freedom

答案A

解析
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