Events
in the Ukraine are much more complicated than what is portrayed in
the West
Quite
apart from the CIA wanting to undermine Russia any way it can the
Ukraine (besides being the birthplace of the Russian state) is
basically a Soviet creation and is divided by western-looking (and
anti-Russian) population in the West and a Russian-speaking
population in the East. Yanukhovich was democratically-elected and
made mo secret of his policies.
This
is a country divided and these divisions will be exploited by
America.
The
commentary in the video below, in my opinion, is spot-on
Thousands of protesters block govt HQ in Kiev
The
opposition have entrenched themselves in the center of the Ukrainian
capital, ready to repel police, while a column of 5,000 activists are
picketing the cabinet headquarters. Police are trying to persuade
intruders to leave government facilities.
RT,
2
December, 2013
Early
in the morning opposition leaders formed a column of protesters that
marched to the Ukrainian government headquarters and encircled it,
declaring they would stay there all day to prevent the government
from functioning. Protesters have also announced a national strike
starting from Monday.
Eight
buses with officers from the Berkut riot police squad are parked in
the courtyard of the government building, but they are not
interfering with the demonstrators. Police are guarding the entrances
to the cabinet.
Those
blocking government headquarters are carrying national flags and
banners of the nationalist Svoboda (Freedom) party, following
overnight clashes with the police.
Opposition
leaders have addressed their supporters and reiterated their demands:
resignation of both the government and the president and early
presidential and parliamentary elections.
Kiev
mayor, Aleksandr Popov, has called on the protesters occupying the
city administration building to “let the employees work normally
for the city, its citizens and guests”.
Popov warned that blocking the administration’s work may result in
“delays in payments for public sector workers, food
shortages, water, power and heating shortages”,
and may disrupt the work of hospitals, schools and kindergartens.
Former
minister of the interior and currently one of the leaders of the
opposition, Yury Lutsenko, called on the people to rally near the
cabinet building and not to approach the presidential administration,
which was fruitlessly sieged on Sunday.
The
rally near the seat of government will continue until “an
order to return to Maidan
[Independence Square] comes,”
Lutsenko stressed.
Protest
leaders are stressing that the march is peaceful and are calling on
their supporters to “remain
calm”.
But
the Ukrainian authorities see “signs
of a coup”
in the attempts to block the government agencies by the protesters,
Prime Minister Nikolay Azarov said
on Monday during a meeting with ambassadors from EU states and the US
in Kiev.
Some
political forces have “an
illusion”
that they can topple the government, Azarov said, adding that the
government is nevertheless exercising restraint and has ordered
police not use force against peaceful demonstrators.
Meanwhile,
Russian President Vladimir Putin said that the developments in Kiev
have no direct relation to Ukraine and the EU deal, and that they had
been prepared by the opposition to undermine the country's legitimate
government.
“As
far as the events in Ukraine are concerned, to me they don’t look
like a revolution, but rather like 'pogrom'. However strange this
might seem, in my view it has little to do with Ukrainian-EU
relations,”
Putin said.
The
Ukrainian protest reached a head of steam the previous night in
fierce
clashes
with police, who were trying to contain a human sea of reportedly
around 500,000 protesting people.
Some
senior EU politicians have blamed Russia for what's led to the
situation in Kiev, saying it was Kremlin interference that sunk the
deal with the EU.
But
the fact that some European politicians are getting involved directly
in the protests in Ukraine, and are calling for a revolution and a
regime change in the country “is
the most egregious violation of the UN Charter and international law,
violation of sovereignty and noninterference into domestic affairs of
other states,”
Mark Sleboda, professor of international relations at Moscow State
University, speaking to RT.
The
clashes left 165 activists wounded, 109 of whom were hospitalized
overnight. Reportedly, nearly 140 law enforcement officers were also
injured, and no less than 75 of them were brought to hospitals, five
in serious condition.
Over
40 journalists suffered injuries in recent clashes between protesters
and police in Kiev. Most of them were wounded during the siege of the
presidential administration on Sunday, Interfax reported.
Despite
the huge number of people taking part in the protests, police said
the ‘spear’ of protesters, who lashed police ranks, were groups
of young aggressive activists. Masked and wearing helmets, armed with
tubes and metal rods, they were a rogue element numbered in the mere
hundreds, according to the police. Most of them belong to ultra-right
nationalist groups
"The presidential administration building became a scene of a battlefield on Sunday as several hundred protesters clashed with the police in a very brutal for Ukraine manner with rocks flying towards the police, tear gas and flashbangs used (against the police); this was pretty much hell breaking loose," RT's Aleksey Yaroshevsky reported.
Protesters participating in pro-EU rallies stand near the entrance to Ukraine's Cabinet building in Kiev on December 2, 2013. (RIA Novosti / Andrey Stenin)
The
demonstrators managed to storm the Kiev City Council building and
headquarters of the Ukrainian trade unions, but police managed to
protect other government buildings.
Having
failed to seize major government buildings in the Ukrainian capital
and paralyze the work of the government and presidential
administration, opposition activists are gearing up to make another
attempt to gain the upper hand for more bargaining power.
“We
should be careful about attributing what’s going on to the majority
of people in Ukraine. I suspect that the tragedy of Ukraine is that
the great majority of people is rather passive and certainly rather
disillusioned about politics on both sides,” Mark Almond, professor
of history at Oxford University told RT. In the end the minority
groups of nationalists supported from the EU might succeed in
creating a really volatile situation, which would question "whether
Ukraine is viable as a state", Almond warned.
In
the meantime, police are negotiating with opposition members who
remain inside the seized buildings, trying to talk them into leaving
the scene peacefully. They are trying to persuade the activists that
in view of the start of a new working week, civil servants must
return to work in the mayor’s office and trade unions’
headquarters.
Some
intruders have agreed to move on to Maidan Square and join activists
who remain there behind barricades, guarding territory gains made
overnight.
The
city of Kiev is now much quieter. The number of protesters has
decreased dramatically, practically 100-fold, from the estimated
500,000 to 5,000 currently rallying near the government residence.
The protesters remaining on Maidan Square have even made passageways
in the barricades to allow pedestrians through. Several police buses
are parked next to the presidential headquarters, providing
protective security.
If this photo is genuine it seems that demonstrations are not limited to Kiev - but are in Western Ukraine.
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