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Ukraine leader lays out vision of new war-time constitution

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Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko on Wednesday proposed constitutional changes giving sweeping powers to the regions but critically failing to address demands of pro-Russian militants in the separatist east.

Poroshenko's new vision of the ex-Soviet state's basic law trims presidential controls over the provinces and extends to local towns and councils the right to oversee how their tax revenues are spent.

But it also refuses to add to the constitution the semi-autonomous status demanded by insurgency leaders who control an industrial edge of Ukraine that is home to 3.5 million people and accounts for a tenth of its economic output.

"The president is not ready to inscribe (the separatist regions') separatist status in the basic law," said International Centre for Policy Studies' analyst Anatoliy Oktysyuk.

"This carries huge political risks for the authorities. It is an unpopular decision that would open the entire presidential coalition in parliament to criticism."

The westward-leading leader -- elected in the wake of the February 2014 ouster of Russian-backed president Viktor Yanukovych -- said the amendments would decentralise power but never turn Ukraine into a loose federation that Moscow has sought.

Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko addresses media in Kiev on July 1  2015
Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko addresses media in Kiev on July 1, 2015
Sergei Supinsky, AFP

"Decentralisation would bring our political system closer to that of Europe," Poroshenko said in a nationally televised address.

He argued the changes -- still to be approved by parliament -- would hand locally-elected administration leaders and councils "a vast amount of rights and financial resources that today are overseen by the president and the government."

"Decentralisation safeguards us from authoritarianism and dictatorship," said the 49-year-old former business baron.

"Decentralisation will be our civilised distinction from our neighbours in the Soviet camp," he added in apparent reference to Russia and Belarus.

Rebel-controlled parts of the mostly Russian-speaking Lugansk and Donetsk regions would like to see their semi-autonomous status spelled out in clearly-defined constitutional amendments that would be enormously difficult to overturn.

But Poroshenko's draft only makes reference to an existing piece of legislation that gives insurgency leaders partial self-rule for an interim period of three years.

The separatists fear that the law could be revoked or suspended by Ukraine's strongly pro-European parliament.

- 'Shooting from all sides' -

A Ukrainian serviceman walks along boards used as protection against snipers in Shyrokyne  Donetsk r...
A Ukrainian serviceman walks along boards used as protection against snipers in Shyrokyne, Donetsk region on June 29, 2015
Anatolii Stepanov, AFP/File

"None of these changes were agreed with us in advance," separatist leader Andrei Purgin told Russian news agencies.

Kiev's Western allies have long pushed Poroshenko to loosen the central authorities' dominant role in Ukrainians' lives.

Washington believes regional rights would make politics more transparent and help break the corrupt bonds forged in the past two decades between decision-makers and tycoons.

But Moscow has argued that only a "federalised" Ukraine in which regions form their own diplomatic and trade relations with other nations can finally end a bloody revolt that has claimed more than 6,500 lives in 15 months.

Poroshenko has expressed concern that such rights could see the two main separatist regions block Kiev's attempts to join the European Union and apply for eventual NATO membership.

Militias in control of swathes of the war zone -- now strewn with landmines and the smouldering remains of coal mines and steel mills -- have cut ties with Kiev and receive humanitarian and diplomatic support from Moscow.

They and the Kremlin both fiercely deny the presence of Russians soldiers and arms on their lands.

Pro-Russian rebels stationed in the eastern Ukrainian city of Gorlivka  Donetsk region  launch missi...
Pro-Russian rebels stationed in the eastern Ukrainian city of Gorlivka, Donetsk region, launch missiles towards Ukrainian forces in Debaltseve on February 13, 2015
Andrey Borodulin, AFP/File

But insurgency commanders still stage periodic attacks aimed at expanding their holdings far past the heavily fortified frontline.

An AFP team in the frontline city of Gorlivka -- home to nearly 300,000 people who depended on the local coal mine before the war -- heard intense overnight shelling that forced the remaining residents to seek shelter in basements for the second consecutive week.

"We do not know who is doing the shooting. It comes from all sides", said a 49-year-old resident who identified herself only as Alla out of security concerns.

If the rebels "decide to continue attacking, we will have a lot of victims. We need a peaceful solution", she said.

Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko on Wednesday proposed constitutional changes giving sweeping powers to the regions but critically failing to address demands of pro-Russian militants in the separatist east.

Poroshenko’s new vision of the ex-Soviet state’s basic law trims presidential controls over the provinces and extends to local towns and councils the right to oversee how their tax revenues are spent.

But it also refuses to add to the constitution the semi-autonomous status demanded by insurgency leaders who control an industrial edge of Ukraine that is home to 3.5 million people and accounts for a tenth of its economic output.

“The president is not ready to inscribe (the separatist regions’) separatist status in the basic law,” said International Centre for Policy Studies’ analyst Anatoliy Oktysyuk.

“This carries huge political risks for the authorities. It is an unpopular decision that would open the entire presidential coalition in parliament to criticism.”

The westward-leading leader — elected in the wake of the February 2014 ouster of Russian-backed president Viktor Yanukovych — said the amendments would decentralise power but never turn Ukraine into a loose federation that Moscow has sought.

Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko addresses media in Kiev on July 1  2015

Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko addresses media in Kiev on July 1, 2015
Sergei Supinsky, AFP

“Decentralisation would bring our political system closer to that of Europe,” Poroshenko said in a nationally televised address.

He argued the changes — still to be approved by parliament — would hand locally-elected administration leaders and councils “a vast amount of rights and financial resources that today are overseen by the president and the government.”

“Decentralisation safeguards us from authoritarianism and dictatorship,” said the 49-year-old former business baron.

“Decentralisation will be our civilised distinction from our neighbours in the Soviet camp,” he added in apparent reference to Russia and Belarus.

Rebel-controlled parts of the mostly Russian-speaking Lugansk and Donetsk regions would like to see their semi-autonomous status spelled out in clearly-defined constitutional amendments that would be enormously difficult to overturn.

But Poroshenko’s draft only makes reference to an existing piece of legislation that gives insurgency leaders partial self-rule for an interim period of three years.

The separatists fear that the law could be revoked or suspended by Ukraine’s strongly pro-European parliament.

– ‘Shooting from all sides’ –

A Ukrainian serviceman walks along boards used as protection against snipers in Shyrokyne  Donetsk r...

A Ukrainian serviceman walks along boards used as protection against snipers in Shyrokyne, Donetsk region on June 29, 2015
Anatolii Stepanov, AFP/File

“None of these changes were agreed with us in advance,” separatist leader Andrei Purgin told Russian news agencies.

Kiev’s Western allies have long pushed Poroshenko to loosen the central authorities’ dominant role in Ukrainians’ lives.

Washington believes regional rights would make politics more transparent and help break the corrupt bonds forged in the past two decades between decision-makers and tycoons.

But Moscow has argued that only a “federalised” Ukraine in which regions form their own diplomatic and trade relations with other nations can finally end a bloody revolt that has claimed more than 6,500 lives in 15 months.

Poroshenko has expressed concern that such rights could see the two main separatist regions block Kiev’s attempts to join the European Union and apply for eventual NATO membership.

Militias in control of swathes of the war zone — now strewn with landmines and the smouldering remains of coal mines and steel mills — have cut ties with Kiev and receive humanitarian and diplomatic support from Moscow.

They and the Kremlin both fiercely deny the presence of Russians soldiers and arms on their lands.

Pro-Russian rebels stationed in the eastern Ukrainian city of Gorlivka  Donetsk region  launch missi...

Pro-Russian rebels stationed in the eastern Ukrainian city of Gorlivka, Donetsk region, launch missiles towards Ukrainian forces in Debaltseve on February 13, 2015
Andrey Borodulin, AFP/File

But insurgency commanders still stage periodic attacks aimed at expanding their holdings far past the heavily fortified frontline.

An AFP team in the frontline city of Gorlivka — home to nearly 300,000 people who depended on the local coal mine before the war — heard intense overnight shelling that forced the remaining residents to seek shelter in basements for the second consecutive week.

“We do not know who is doing the shooting. It comes from all sides”, said a 49-year-old resident who identified herself only as Alla out of security concerns.

If the rebels “decide to continue attacking, we will have a lot of victims. We need a peaceful solution”, she said.

AFP
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With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

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