Showing posts with label Ukraine's. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ukraine's. Show all posts

Monday, April 7, 2014

Separatist passions reignite in Ukraine’s east




MOSCOW, Russia — Pro-Russian activists have stormed key administration buildings in several of Ukraine’s Russian-speaking eastern regions in an apparently coordinated action that’s renewed fears about a growing tide of separatism.


As of Monday evening, protesters reportedly controlled the state security buildings in Donetsk and Luhansk — the capitals of two heavily industrialized regions in the country’s east — as well as the regional administration building in Donetsk.


More than 100 separatists who seized that office declared a separatist “People’s Republic of Donetsk” and are demanding a Crimea-style referendum within a month on secession from Ukraine.


They also called for Moscow to deploy a “peacekeeping contingent” if the Kyiv government moves to restore order there, Reuters reported.


The news follows weeks of simmering separatist sentiments in the largely pro-Russian east, where the country’s new authorities have attempted to crack down on separatism but are still struggling to reassert their authority.


Until late Sunday, when the protesters stormed buildings in Donetsk, Luhansk and Kharkiv, another major city, the anti-Kyiv protests in eastern Ukraine — where resentment against the new pro-Western government remains strong — had largely died down.


Prime Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk on Monday slammed the events as a Moscow-orchestrated provocation aimed at destabilizing Ukraine.


“An anti-Ukrainian plan is being put into operation… under which foreign troops will cross the border and seize the country’s territory,” he said at an emergency cabinet meeting, news agencies reported. “We will not allow this.”


Ukraine’s security service, the SBU, said on Monday that it had arrested a suspected Russian intelligence officer two days earlier who had been coordinating a separatist movement in Luhansk.


Several leading Ukrainian officials were dispatched to the country’s east in an effort to stabilize the situation.


Although the Russian authorities have denied stoking separatist sentiment in Ukraine, the government in Kyiv has consistently claimed that Russian “tourists” — bussed into eastern Ukraine to stir protests — have played a key role in supporting unrest.


A local journalist in Kharkiv reported on Sunday that separatist protesters there had initially stormed the local opera theater after mistaking it for the city hall in an apparent sign the activists were unfamiliar with the city.


Meanwhile, Russian state media — which have helped fuel discontent with the Kyiv authorities in Ukraine’s east through a heavy-handed propaganda campaign — provided extensive evening news coverage of the events in Donetsk.


More from GlobalPost: Here’s why the US and Russia would be MAD to go to war


Tens of thousands of Russian troops remain massed near the Ukrainian border, feeding international fears that the Kremlin has been preparing to seize Ukraine’s eastern regions much as it did with Crimea last month.


Russian officials have sought to assuage those concerns, with a top Russian senator saying on Monday that his country would be unable to send peacekeepers into eastern Ukraine without approval from the United Nations.


“Russia has no right to do this unilaterally,” said Viktor Ozerov, head of the Federation Council’s defense and security committee, the news agency Interfax reported.


Also on Monday, a Ukrainian military officer was shot and killed in Crimea — seized by Russia in late February and annexed last month — after an alleged confrontation with his Russian counterparts. 


http://www.globalpost.com/dispatch/news/regions/europe/140407/ukraine-east-russia-separatist-passions




GlobalPost – Regions



Separatist passions reignite in Ukraine’s east

Monday, February 24, 2014

Ukraine"s fugitive president wanted for mass murder

KIEV (Reuters) – Ukraine’s new authorities issued an arrest warrant on Monday for mass murder against ousted president Viktor Yanukovich, who is on the run after being toppled by bloody street protests in which police snipers killed demonstrators.






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Ukraine"s fugitive president wanted for mass murder

Ukraine"s turmoil brings tough challenge to Putin








Russian President Vladimir Putin, right, shakes hands with Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych at the Olympic reception hosted by the Russian President in Sochi, Russia, Friday, Feb. 7, 2014. (AP Photo/RIA-Novosti, Alexei Nikolsky, Presidential Press Service)





Russian President Vladimir Putin, right, shakes hands with Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych at the Olympic reception hosted by the Russian President in Sochi, Russia, Friday, Feb. 7, 2014. (AP Photo/RIA-Novosti, Alexei Nikolsky, Presidential Press Service)





Russian Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev speaks to press after a meeting with his Armenian counterpart Tigran Sargsyan in Sochi, Russia. The statement by Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev was the strongest criticism yet from Russia, which had backed Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych, who fled the capital of Kiev after striking a deal with the opposition. The Ukrainian parliament on Saturday quickly ousted him and set new elections for May, and its new speaker has been named Ukraine’s caretaker president. (AP Photo/RIA Novosti, Dmitry Astakhov, Government Press Service)













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MOSCOW (AP) — A successful Olympics behind him, President Vladimir Putin is facing what may become the most dramatic challenge of his rule: how to respond to the turmoil in Ukraine, a country he has declared vital for Russia’s interests, which is home to millions of Russian-speakers and hosts a major Russian navy base.


Some in Ukraine’s Russian-speaking east and south already have begged the Kremlin to help protect them against what they fear could be violence by the victorious protesters who toppled Ukraine’s Moscow-backed leader. Putin has refrained from taking a public stance on Ukraine amid the Sochi Games, but the mounting tensions could quickly leave him with a stark choice: Stick to diplomacy and risk losing face at home, or open a Pandora’s box by entering the fray.


If Moscow openly backs separatist-minded groups in Ukraine’s Crimean Peninsula that serves as the base for Russia’s Black Sea Fleet, it could unleash devastating hostilities that Europe hasn’t seen since the Balkan wars. And ignoring pleas for help from pro-Russian groups in Ukraine could shatter Putin’s carefully manicured image of the tough ruler eager to stand up to the West, eroding his conservative support base at home, where his foes could be encouraged by the Ukrainian example.


Facing such high risks, Putin has remained silent, weighing his options. His premier, Dmitry Medvedev, on Monday poured scorn on the new Ukrainian authorities who replaced President Viktor Yanukovych, and questioned their legitimacy. But he wouldn’t say what action Russia might take to protect its interests.


“If you consider Kalashnikov-toting people in black masks who are roaming Kiev to be the government, then it will be hard for us to work with that government,” Medvedev said.


The Russian Foreign Ministry criticized the West for turning a blind eye to what Moscow described as the opposition reneging on its agreement signed Friday to form a unity government and aiming to “suppress dissent in various regions of Ukraine with dictatorial and, sometimes, even terrorist methods.”


Amid spiraling tensions and increasingly tough rhetoric, Putin’s best hope for striking a peaceful compromise on Russian interests in Ukraine could paradoxically be former Prime Minister Yulia Tymoshenko, who was freed Saturday after more than 2½ years behind bars.


Tymoshenko, who narrowly lost the 2010 presidential vote to Yanukovych and landed in prison on abuse of office charges that were denounced by the West, immediately jumped to the forefront of Ukraine’s political scene. She flew to the capital immediately after her release to speak to tens of thousands of demonstrators on Kiev’s Independence Square, known as the Maidan.


Her charisma, ambitions and unparalleled political skills would make her all but certain to win the Ukrainian presidency in early elections set for May. Putin, who had good ties with Ukraine’s fiery ex-premier in the past, could hope for striking a deal with her that would safeguard Russian interests without the need to resort to force.


“If she consolidates power, Putin will be quite happy. They understand each other perfectly well,” said Stanislav Belkovsky, a political consultant who advised the Kremlin and worked in Ukraine. “He has good ties with Tymoshenko, and her triumph would suit him.”


Tymoshenko, who comes from eastern Ukraine, could be an ideal peacemaker, restoring an uneasy balance between Ukraine’s Russian-speaking east and south, and its western regions that abhor Russian influence.


She is burdened, however, by the legacy of insider deals and corruption allegations during her business and government careers, which may challenge her campaign. She also faces the tough task of winning the trust of some of the protesters, who are suspicious of old players and want fresh faces and strong action. And she will have to walk a fine line between publicly taking an anti-Kremlin posture to win votes in western regions and assuaging residents of the east that their interests will be protected.


For Putin, she could actually make a more convenient partner than the hesitant and indecisive Yanukovych, who had tried to maneuver between Russia and the West and provoked public anger by abruptly shelving a pact with the European Union in favor of a bailout from Moscow.


Russia’s state-controlled broadcasters heaped scorn on Yanukovych, casting him as a leader who was too weak to use force to establish order and betrayed police who had stood behind him. That’s a clear sign the Kremlin sees him as a discarded asset.


Reports about Yanukovych hiding in the Crimea, which hosts Russia’s naval base, could encourage some activists in Kiev and western Ukraine to pressure the government to apprehend him. They want to put him on trial for sanctioning the use of force against protesters that resulted in scores of deaths.


Such a move could set the stage for violence in the Crimea, where most of the population speaks Russian and abhors nationalist groups from western Ukraine.


Any such clashes would in turn put pressure on Putin to intervene, and he could come under the influence of more hawkish figures in his administration who have been advocating a tough line on Ukraine to expose alleged Western plots to pry the country from Russia’s sphere of influence.


The talk about reclaiming the Crimea long has been rife in Russia’s political circles. The region fell under Russia’s control in the 18th century under Catherine the Great and only became part of Ukraine in 1954, when then-Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev transferred it from Russian to Ukrainian administrative control.


Fyodor Lukyanov, the editor of Russia in Global Affairs magazine and head of the Council for Foreign and Defense Policies, said that for the Kremlin the key indicators would be the action by the new government regarding the Black Sea Fleet’s presence in Ukraine and authorities’ pledges to stay away from military blocs.


He said that if Moscow sees Kiev reneging on these issues, it would set off alarms in the Kremlin as a possible signal of Ukraine joining NATO.


“Ukraine in NATO has been a red line,” Lukyanov said. “If that happens, various options will come under consideration, including appeal to certain parts of Ukraine, including the Crimea.”


He warned that a violent confrontation between pro-Moscow protesters and demonstrators supporting the new Ukrainian authorities could force Russia to act.


“If clashes occur in the Crimea, Russia will start by issuing harsh statements and put the Black Sea Fleet on high alert,” Lukyanov said. “Russia couldn’t ignore it. There are all kinds of risks.”


Associated Press




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Ukraine"s turmoil brings tough challenge to Putin