The only corrective I would offer to the RT story is that reports are that life goes on, pretty much as normal and the numbers of protesters occupying buildings is allegedly quite small.
Kiev backpedals on
referendums after deadline
to stop protest expires
The
U-turn comes after Ukraine’s elite Alpha unit reportedly refused to
obey an order to besiege protester-held buildings. At a session of
law enforcement officials in Donetsk, one of the Alpha commanders
said that he and his men are a force intended for rescuing hostages
and fighting terrorism and will only act in accordance with the law,
local media reported.
Donetsk
activists remain in control of the regional administration building
and have built three lines of barricades to defend themselves from a
possible siege. They have declared the Donetsk region, which is home
to about one-tenth of the population of Ukraine, a “people’s
republic” and have demanded a referendum on its future status. They
also declared forming a “people’s army” in response to threats
from violence form Kiev.
Kiev backpedals on
referendums after deadline
to stop protest expires
RT,
11
April, 2014
Just
after a deadline set by Kiev for protesters in eastern Ukraine to
vacate seized buildings expired, Parliament-appointed PM Arseny
Yatsenyuk pledged to push through a law allowing regional referendums
in the country.
Holding
referendums on the status of their respective regions was among the
main demands posed by anti-Maidan activists, who have taken over a
number of governmental buildings in eastern Ukraine this week.
Ukrainian
law currently does not allow regions to hold referendums separately
from the rest of the country. It was one of the main arguments Kiev
voiced in declaring illegal last month’s referendum in Crimea,
which ended with the peninsula’s seceding from Ukraine and joining
Russia.
Speaking
in Donetsk, one of the regions engulfed by the anti-Kiev protests,
Yatsenyuk said his government wants greater autonomy for Ukrainian
regions, including the abolition of the offices of capital-appointed
governors.
He
was speaking just as a 48-hour deadline, which Kiev gave to
protesters to liberate the seized buildings, expired. Previously the
central authorities threatened to use force, including that of the
military and even threatened their opponents as terrorists, unless
they withdrew from the buildings.
Arseny Yatsenyuk (RIA Novosti /
Grigoriy Vasilenko)
The
unconfirmed act of defiance comes days after the siege by police of a
protesters-seized building in Kharkov, which ended with dozens of
activists being arrested. On Thursday, a local police
lieutenant-colonel spoke to the media, claiming that he and other
officers had been deceived by the Kiev authorities. He claimed that
they were sent to take over the building under the pretext that it
was held by dangerous armed bandits. In fact the protesters had only
improvised clubs and offered no resistance to the storming troops.
The
officer, Andrey Chuikov, said he would no longer take “criminal”
orders and announced his resignation from the police, adding that he
would be sacked anyway by his superiors for speaking to the press.
Discontent
with the new authorities in Kiev, which has been brewing in eastern
and southern Ukraine for weeks, escalated on Monday, as protesters in
several cities started to take over governmental buildings. Protests
took place in the cities of Donetsk, Kharkov and Lugansk, while
smaller protest actions and some clashes were reported in Odessa and
Nikolayev.
Pro-Russian protesters hold placards
during their rally outside the regional state administration
building in the eastern Ukrainian city of Donetsk on April 10, 2014.
(AFP Photo / Anatoliy Stepanov)
Negotiations
between the activists and the Kiev-appointed authorities of the
region were held on Thursday and into Friday morning. They are trying
to hammer out a deal to deescalate the tension, which includes some
sort of joint patrols formed by police and the activists of Donetsk
and a possible relocation of the protesters to a nearby building.
In
Lugansk, activists are maintaining their hold on a Ukrainian Security
Service office. They also cordoned off a base of the Interior
Ministry’s troops on Thursday night, saying this would prevent
their deployment for a crackdown on the protest, although later the
blockade was lifted.
After
the deadline passed to leave the occupied buildings or face a
crackdown, the anti-Kiev protesters have given an ultimatum to the
post-coup government. They demand a referendum to be held within 10
days on whether to break away and join Russia.
Meanwhile,
in Kharkov, where police on Tuesday captured a regional
administration building and took more than 50 activists into custody,
the protests do not seem to be calming down. On Thursday evening
several hundred people picketed the building, despite a court ban on
doing so. A mass protest rally is scheduled for Sunday.
Ukraine fails to break stalemate with pro-Russian protesters in east
Arseniy
Yatsenyuk promises devolution to local government in hope of staving
off demands for their independence from Kiev
11
April, 2014
Ukraine's
interim prime minister, Arseniy Yatsenyuk, attempted and failed on
Friday to break a tense deadlock in the country's east, where armed
pro-Russian protesters have barricaded themselves inside government
buildings and demanded independence from Kiev.
Protesters
in the eastern Ukrainian cities of Donetsk, Kharkiv and Luhansk
seized government buildings on Sunday. While police managed to clear
the Luhansk protest site swiftly, protesters in Donetsk and Kharkiv
remain entrenched.
Yatsenyuk
met officials from the eastern regions in Donetsk and promised to
expand the powers of local government bodies and preserve the status
of Russian as a second official language. But he did not meet
representatives of the protesters who have declared a "people's
republic" from a Donetsk administrative building and demanded
that a referendum on independence be held by 11 May
A
48-hour deadline to clear the occupied buildings announced by
Ukraine's interior minister came and went without incident, despite
persistent rumours of an impending assault by government forces.
Protest leaders said negotiations to clear the building had come to a
standstill.
In
Luhansk, further east, dozens of men remained barricaded inside the
state security service headquarters, armed with Kalashnikovs. They
demand a referendum on federalising Ukraine.
"If
we get federation, then people will decide whether they want to be
inside of Ukraine or in Russia," said Aleksey Kariakin, one of
the leaders of the group, who earlier held talks with Ukraine's
security chief, Andriy Parubiy.
The
protesters deny that they have been sustained, or prompted to action,
by Russia, or have Russian nationals among their number. They claim
they are backed only by hundreds of people who live in a tent camp
set to protect and supply them.
"If
they decide to arrest me, this group will act as a human shield,"
Kariakin said.
Tatiana
Botsman, 29, is one of their hardcore supporters. She cooks meals for
the occupiers and tea for participants of the tent camp. She is not
afraid of a police attack. "If they come I will take a wooden
stick and stand side by side with my husband," she said.
Protesters
in Donetsk have called on Russia to deploy peacekeepers to facilitate
a referendum on independence by 11 May.
Yatsenyuk
did not agree to a referendum but suggested the system of regional
administrations appointed by the president should be replaced by
executive committees elected by regional parliaments, which would
have "all financial, economic, administrative and other powers
to control the corresponding region".
He
also recommended that the parliament approve legislation that would
change the constitution to allow for local referendums, a move
strongly supported by the leaders of the Donetsk occupation.
Yatsenyuk
said changes to the country's constitution should be approved before
a presidential election planned for 25 May that the Kiev regime has
said will fully legitimise the new government.
But
Denis Pushilin, the chairman of the temporary government in Donetsk,
told the Guardian on Friday afternoon he had not heard of these
concessions and that any decision on them would have to be made by a
loosely organised council of protest leaders.
"They
haven't appealed to us with this offer," he said of the prime
minister's promise of greater regional power.
The
protesters refuse to recognise the new Kiev government, which they
say is dominated by nationalists from western Ukraine. Their talks
with the Kiev-appointed governor of the region have been mediated by
Rinat Akhmetov – Ukraine's richest man and owner of many of the
coalmines that form the core of Donetsk's economy.
Pushilin
said talks broke down after the protesters' offer to give back two
floors of the occupied 11-storey building so that regional officials
could continue their work was rejected by Kiev officials who insisted
they vacate the entire building: "Now it's all up in the air."
In
another attempt to placate protesters, Yatseniuk said the government
would not repeal a law that allows regions with ethnic minorities
forming at least 10% of the population to declare a second official
language. Language is an acutely sensitive political issue in eastern
regions with large ethnic Russian populations such as Donetsk, where
according to a 2001 census Russian is the native language of almost
three-quarters of the population.
"No
one will ever limit the Russian language and the right to speak it in
Ukraine," Yatsenyuk said.
Shortly
after President Viktor Yanukovich was ousted in February, Ukraine's
parliament voted to cancel the second official language law. Although
the acting president, Oleksandr Turchynov, refused to sign the
measure, the damage had been done. One of the main grievances voiced
by protesters in Donetsk and Luhansk is a perceived campaign by the
new nationalist regime in Kiev against Russian language and culture.
The government has banned the broadcast of Russian television
channels, further agitating many residents of Ukraine's southern and
eastern regions.
Later
on Friday, Yatsenyuk appeared on television in the eastern city of
Dnepropetrovsk for a "dialogue with the east". During the
interview, he promised that the poorest 30% of the population would
receive assistance to compensate the cost of gas and heating, which
is rising under an austerity program demanded by the International
Monetary Fund.
Yatsenyuk
has blamed Russia for exacerbating the crisis by doubling the price
at which it sells gas to Ukraine.
"They
understand that the gas price hike will lie on the shoulders of the
population. Where is our brotherly relationship now?" he asked,
referring to President Vladimir Putin's frequent comments that Russia
and Ukraine were "brother peoples".
Putin
tried to ease European fears of gas supply cuts on Friday after
Brussels said it would stand with the new authorities in Kiev if the
Kremlin carried out a threat to turn off the tap to Ukraine.
"I
want to say again: we do not intend and do not plan to shut off the
gas for Ukraine," Putin said in televised comments at a meeting
of his security council. "We guarantee fulfilment of all our
obligations to our European consumers."
Sergei
Lavrov, the Russian foreign minister, also said that Russia did not
want to take over more Ukrainian territory but repeated a call for
Kiev to grant more powers to regional authorities. "We want
Ukraine to be whole within its current borders, but whole with full
respect for the regions."
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