Clashes
threaten all Ukraine - president
Ukraine's
President Viktor Yanukovych is warning the stability of his nation is
threatened by the continuing clashes between police and
anti-government protesters in the capital, Kiev.
A
smoke grenade explodes during clashes between police and protesters
in central Kiev.
Photo:
AFP
21
January, 2014
In
his first public comments on the most recent violence, he also called
for dialogue, compromise and calm on Monday.
The
conflict - the worst in Kiev in recent times - comes after two months
of demonstrations against Mr Yanukovych's refusal to sign a pact for
closer integration with the European Union
In
a second day of clashes after 200 were injured in Sunday's fighting,
thousands of Ukrainians braved temperatures of minus 10 degrees
Celsius to take part in a new stand-off with police, AFP reports.
Protesters
lobbed stones dug up from the cobbled road, flung Molotov cocktails
and threw fireworks at police lines over a 20-metre no-man's land on
Monday. Police responded with stun grenades rubber bullets and tear
gas.
"I
am convinced that such phenomena are a threat not only to the public
in Kiev but all of Ukraine," Mr Yanukovych said. "I urge
dialogue, compromise and calm in our native land. I ask you not to
follow those who urge violence, who are seeking to provoke a split
between the state and society."
But
even after his comments, some 10,000 protesters remained around the
centre of the clashes, with the most radical using lasers to blind
police firing stun grenades.
"Who,
if not us, and when, if not now," read a banner carried by one
group of protesters.
According
to the Kiev health authorities, more than 100 protesters were wounded
in Sunday's clashes. The interior ministry said over 100 members of
the security forces had been wounded, and 30 people had been arrested
for mass rioting.
The
White House urged an end to the violence, with US National Security
Council spokeswoman Caitlin Hayden warning that Washington was still
considering sanctions against Ukrainian officials.
EU
foreign ministers meeting in Brussels on Monday said the government
was at fault for adopting repressive laws which allow jail terms of
up to five years for those who blockade public buildings and the
arrest of protesters wearing masks or helmets. Other provisions ban
the dissemination of "slander" on the internet.
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