Rantburg

Today's Front Page   View All of Thu 05/02/2024 View Wed 05/01/2024 View Tue 04/30/2024 View Mon 04/29/2024 View Sun 04/28/2024 View Sat 04/27/2024 View Fri 04/26/2024
2014-01-30 Europe
Ukraine Parliament Debates Amnesty after 'Civil War' Warning
[An Nahar] Ukraine's parliament on Wednesday launched a debate on whether to grant amnesty for detained protesters as the country's first post-independence president warned of civil war.

A day after scrapping tough anti-protest laws that had ignited the latest political turmoil, deputies met in an extraordinary session to consider granting amnesty to those tossed in the slammer
Keep yer hands where we can see 'em, if yez please!
in the anti-government unrest.

The debate came after Prime Minister Mykola Azarov and his entire government resigned on Tuesday after weeks of protests that began when President Viktor Yanukovych pulled out of a key EU deal in favor of closer ties with Moscow in November.

Urging deputies to come to an agreement on the amnesty issue, former president Leonid Kravchuk warned parliament that the country was "on the brink of civil war".

"It is a revolution. It is a dramatic situation in which we must act with the greatest responsibility," Kravchuk, president from 1991 to 1994, said to applause and a standing ovation.

The crisis has reverberated internationally with Russian President Vladimir Putin
...Second and fourth President of the Russian Federation and the first to remain sober. Putin is credited with bringing political stability and re-establishing something like the rule of law, which occasionally results in somebody dropping dead from polonium poisoning. Under Putin, a new group of business magnates controlling significant swathes of Russia's economy has emerged, all of whom have close personal ties to Putin. The old bunch, without close personal ties to Putin, are in jail or in exile or dead...
criticizing what he called "foreign interference" in Ukraine and US President Barack Obama
Ready to Rule from Day One...
voicing support for the protesters during his annual State of Union address on Tuesday.

EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton was on Wednesday set to hold talks on the crisis in Kiev.

Lawmakers had been unable to vote on the amnesty a day earlier after negotiations became bogged down over the authorities' insistence that protesters should vacate seized buildings and streets in Kiev before anyone was released.

Dozens of activists have been arrested since festivities broke out January 19 that resulted in the fatal shooting of three protesters.

The security forces have insisted they were not to blame for the killings, a claim met with incredulity by activists.

In a sign that negotiations between factions on the amnesty were proving tough, speaker Volodymyr Rybak ordered a break in the session until early afternoon for more talks.

'Keep going! Do not stop!'

Tuesday's concessions were the biggest yet by the authorities to placate protesters who have occupied streets and official buildings in the centre of Kiev for over two months but the opposition made clear it wanted more.

The UDAR (Punch) party leader and world boxing champion Vitali Klitschko said: "Azarov should have resigned two months ago... Now the logical step would be the resignation of Viktor Yanukovych."

Jailed former prime minister Yulia Tymoshenko, who the opposition says is the victim of a political vendetta by Yanukovych, welcomed the concessions but added: "It is not enough. Do not stop!"

Ukrainian media meanwhile quoted ruling Regions Party MPs as saying that changes to the constitution to return to the version set out in 2004 which give the presidency fewer powers may also be debated.

"The negotiations between the authorities and the opposition should calm the situation," said Ukrainian political analyst Taras Berezovets, adding that the authorities had nonetheless still failed to rule out the use of force against protesters.

First Deputy Prime Minister Sergiy Arbuzov, who is also close to Yanukovych, has taken over as premier in a caretaker role until a replacement is named.

Some analysts floated the idea that a pro-opposition tycoon, Petro Poroshenko, might step into the post full time. But opposition leaders have signaled they do not want to be in the government.

The protests erupted in late November as a pro-Europe movement after the government ditched an integration deal with the European Union
...the successor to the Holy Roman Empire, only without the Hapsburgs and the nifty uniforms and the dancing...
under Russian pressure.

But they swelled into an all-out drive to unseat Yanukovych and became increasingly radical as protesters flooded into Kiev from the anti-government west of the country.

Protesters, some from right-wing radical groups, remain camped out in the sprawling military-style enclosure that has taken over much of the city center and have now erected wooden watchtowers at their barricades.

Merkel says Ukraine must listen to protesters

Obama on Tuesday gave high-level support to the protesters in Ukraine in his State of the Union address declaring people must "have a say" in the country's future.

The White House said that Vice President Joe Foreign Policy Whiz Kid Biden
The former Senator-for-Life from Delaware, an example of the kind of top-notch Washington intellect to be found in the World's Greatest Deliberative Body...
spoke to Yanukovych by telephone and "strongly encouraged President Yanukovych to continue to work with the opposition to find compromises critical to a peaceful solution".

Attending an EU-Russia summit in Brussels shadowed by tensions over Ukraine, Putin on Tuesday warned his hosts against meddling.

But German Chancellor Angela Merkel
...current chancellor of Germany. She was educated in East Germany when is was still run by commies, but in 1989 got involved with the growing democracy movement when the Berlin Wall fell. Merkel is sometimes referred to by Germans as Mom...
on Wednesday did not hide her support for the protesters, saying "they are fighting for the same values that guide the European Union and that is why they must be listened to."

As concern mounted over the effect on the already fragile economy of the turmoil, Standard & Poor's on Tuesday downgraded the country's credit risk rating by one notch to CCC+ from B-, citing political instability.
Posted by Fred 2014-01-30 00:00|| || Front Page|| [10 views ]  Top

#1 Iff VladVedev = Russia do decide to militarily intervene, I'm curious as to how Ukraine's nuclear security guarantor China will react.

In times past China would be expected to at best support peaceful or diplomatic resolutions, + stay out of the brouhaha - THIS TIME, HOWEVER, AS PER THE STILL-ESCALATING CHINA-VS-JAPAN, PHIL ROWS OVER IN EAST ASIA ITS NOT CERTAIN THAT CHINA WILL, OR SHOULD, STAY OUT OF THIS AFFAIR.

Iff "post-US", "Mahanist", future World #1 China hopes to be exactly that, it M-U-S-T be times willing to put its head into the fire and draw lines in the sand by + for the security + interests of its Allies + Partner-States, which as per the Ukraine means China going head-to-head agz Russia, otherwise China will suffer no credibility.
Posted by JosephMendiola 2014-01-30 01:30||   2014-01-30 01:30|| Front Page Top

#2  I'm curious as to how Ukraine's nuclear security guarantor China will react.

Tell me it ain't so Joe!
Posted by Shipman 2014-01-30 16:17||   2014-01-30 16:17|| Front Page Top

#3 I can't tell you it aint so, because it is so true. Here is a nice little timeline of various headlines that should build a picture or at least fill the color of context.

(Aug 01, 2012) Asia Times: Ukraine turns to Chinese cash

(Jan 08, 2013) Oil Price: China Invests in Ukraine Coal Gasification

(January 16, 2013) PRN: Ukraine, China Intensify Cooperation

Ukraine and China considerably deepened their cooperation throughout the past two years ... In particular, Ukraine - China cooperation involved agricultural sector, energy production, and bilateral trade.

In 2011, trade volume between China and Ukraine grew by nearly 35 percent, exceeding USD 10 billion. In the first six months of 2012, Ukraine increased import from China by almost 23 percent, informs china.mfa.gov.ua. Ore constitutes the major portion of the Ukrainian export to China, while import is prevailed by machines and electric devices.

Additionally, in the coming years China - the world's largest corn consumer - plans to buy approximately 3 million tons of Ukrainian corn annually. To help boost Ukraine's corn production, in July 2012, China provided a USD 3 billion loan for Ukraine's agricultural sector.


(Dec 03, 2013) Interfax: Ukraine, China to develop cooperation in coal gasification - Ukrainian Ambassador to China

(Dec 05, 2013) RT: Ukraine gets $8bn investment from China

(Dec 09, 2013) Oil&Gas: Ukraine to Produce Synthetic Natural Gas with China

(Dec 20, 2013) WCT: Beijing seeks new alliances with nuclear security pact with Ukraine
http://www.wantchinatimes.com/news-subclass-cnt.aspx?id=20131220000045&cid=1701
Posted by mossomo  2014-01-30 23:58||   2014-01-30 23:58|| Front Page Top

07:19 Skidmark
07:18 Procopius2k
07:03 Skidmark
06:59 Skidmark
06:47 Xyz
06:37 NN2N1
06:21 Frank G
06:06 Frank G
05:43 NN2N1
05:41 Skidmark
05:40 NN2N1
05:39 Besoeker
05:35 Skidmark
05:31 Skidmark
05:26 Procopius2k
05:26 NN2N1
05:20 Besoeker
05:11 Grom the Reflective
05:10 Besoeker
05:10 Grom the Reflective
04:59 Grom the Reflective
04:57 Grom the Reflective
04:57 Grom the Reflective
04:54 Besoeker









Paypal:
Google
Search WWW Search rantburg.com