Confirmed: Amidst sharpening crisis, Poroshenko and co. have left Ukraine
Oleg
Chubaenko, PolitNavigator
- Translated by J. Arnoldski
25
July, 2016
Everything
is getting hotter in Ukraine. Alexander Turchynov is speaking of
martial law. Pavel Sheremet was murdered in Kiev. The situation in
Donbass has escalated. Meanwhile, Minister of Internal Affairs head
Avakov has left on vacation. So has Kiev Mayor Klitchko. And not
only them.
As
sources in the Ukrainian Ministry of Transport have relayed to
PolitNavigator, on July 22nd in the late evening, a private
Golfstream 200 plane (tail number T7-PRM) with President Poroshenko
on board departed Kiev International Airport for Malaga, Spain. As
Ukrainian media have repeatedly written, Poroshenko has a villa
near Malaga.
The
president’s departure and his absence in the capital have not
been publicized. The President, however, is even issuing
instructions from his Spanish estate. On Monday, for example, he
instructed the Prime Minister and Mayor of Kiev to strengthen
security measures for public safety.
The
question remains: why have Ukrainian leaders suddenly decided to
leave Ukraine? So far, there has been no answer.
Controversial
religious procession reaches Kyiv-Pechersk Lavra: No incidents
reported
27
July, 2016
In
early July, in western Ukrainian Ternopil region and in eastern
Ukrainian Donetsk region a “Cross procession for peace”
started simultanioulsy, launched by the Ukrainian Orthodox
Church of the Moscow Patriarchate. On July 27, the two columns
converged in the capital city of Kyiv, where a prayer service
was held at St. Volodymyr's Hill. The all-night vigil will be held at
the square outside the Cathedral of the Assumption.
Kyiv 20:00, 27
July 2016 172 READ LATER Photo from UNIAN Given the political pretext
many have seen to the procession, with some of Ukraine’s officials
claiming the event is a tool in Russia’s hybrid war against
Ukraine, aimed at spreading unrest within Ukraine, extensive measures
were taken by law enforcement agencies to ensure security of the
participants and prevent provocations.
Some 8,700 people arrived in
Kyiv to take part in the event, according to Chief on the National
Police Khatia Dekanoidze.
Metal detectors were installed beforehand
in the city center along the way of the columns.
As of 16:00 Kyiv time, the participants of the religious procession
have reached their final destination, the Kyiv Pechersk Lara.
No
incidents were reported by local officials.
During the day, many of
the central streets in Kyiv were closed for traffic. At the moment,
the traffic has been resumed.
As UNIAN reported earlier, citing
RFE/RL, the All-Ukrainian Procession of the Cross for Peace, Love and
Prayer for Ukraine includes thousands of believers from the Ukrainian
Orthodox Church of the Moscow Patriarchate – an affiliate of the
Russian Orthodox Church and a rival of a major Kyiv-based church.
Ukrainian authorities said they suspect the marches are merely a
front for a Moscow-orchestrated plot to stir unrest and prove what
Russia has claimed since Euromaidan protests drove a Moscow-aligned
president from power in 2014: that the rights of Russians, Russian
speakers, and members of the Moscow-based church's flock are at risk
here.
Ukrainian parliament speaker Andriy Parubiy dismissed
those Russian claims and accuses Russia's Federal Security
Service, the FSB, of planning to use the marches to destabilize
Ukraine by fomenting unrest in the streets of Kyiv and creating "an
artificial political crisis."
"Together with peaceful
believers, [the FSB] are bringing provocateurs with prohibited
symbols and symbols of the aggressor country… including athletic
youths who have a history of participating in church-related
attacks," Parubiy alleged in a recent telecast. He said
authorities had gathered intelligence that proved his concerns
legitimate, but he did not present evidence of his claims.
Archbishop
Yevstratiy, secretary of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church of the Kyiv
Patriarchate, told Ukraine's EspresoTV that he believes the
motive for the procession is to show that there is broad support in
Ukraine for "Russkiy Mir," or the Russian World – a term
that has been used by President Vladimir Putin and other Russians to
describe what they claim as Russia's sphere of cultural, spiritual,
and political influence – at a time when Ukrainian churchgoers are
increasingly leaving the Moscow Patriarchate for the Kyiv
Patriarchate.
Meanwhile, Vasyl Hrytsak, chief of the Security Service
of Ukraine (SBU), claimed Russia had orchestrated the processions in
hopes that a "Franz Ferdinand moment" would occur,
referring to the Austrian archduke whose assassination in 1914
sparked World War I. Then, he said, Moscow could claim Ukraine is
violating Orthodox Christian believers' rights, concocting a reason
to intervene.
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