Connect with us

Hi, what are you looking for?

World

President warns clashes threaten all Ukraine as fighting rages

-

Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych on Monday warned bloody clashes between protesters and police threatened all of Ukraine as new fighting rocked the capital Kiev.

The clashes, the worst in Kiev in recent times, marked a spiralling of tensions after two months of demonstrations against Yanukovych's refusal to sign a pact for closer integration with the EU.

Amid growing fears the police could act to violently disperse the protest, Ukraine's Prosecutor General Viktor Pshonka warned protesters to halt "mass rioting", describing it as a crime against the state.

In a second day of clashes after 200 were injured in Sunday's fighting, thousands of Ukrainians braved temperatures of minus 10 degrees Celsius (14 degrees Fahrenheit) to take part in the standoff with police.

Map of Kiev locating Independence Square  the site of an opposition protest in Ukraine
Map of Kiev locating Independence Square, the site of an opposition protest in Ukraine
, Graphics/AFP

In the epicentre of the clashes outside the entrance to the iconic Dynamo Kiev football stadium in central Kiev, both sides hunkered down behind barricades.

The protesters lobbed stones dug up from the cobbled road, flung Molotov cocktails and threw fireworks over a 20-metre (65-foot) no-man's land at police lines.

Police responded by throwing stun grenades and occasionally using 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," Yanukovych said in an address to the nation broadcast on state TV.

"I urge dialogue, compromise and calm in our native land," he said in his first public comments on the violence.

A Ukrainian protester displays rubber bullets and pellets used by police during clashe with oppositi...
A Ukrainian protester displays rubber bullets and pellets used by police during clashe with opposition demonstrators in Kiev, on January 20, 2014
Sergei Supinsky, AFP

Showing increasing impatience with the events, he added: "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.

Tymoshenko backs radical protesters

A Ukrainian protester taunts riot police during clashes in the centre of Kiev  on January 20  2014
A Ukrainian protester taunts riot police during clashes in the centre of Kiev, on January 20, 2014
Sergei Supinsky, AFP

The burned-out wrecks of half a dozen police vehicles torched and destroyed the day earlier were used by the protesters as a barricade.

According to the Kiev health authorities, more than 100 protesters were wounded in Sunday's clashes, with four people sustaining serious injuries to eyes and limbs.

The interior ministry said more than 100 members of the security forces had been wounded. The ministry added that 30 people had been arrested for mass rioting.

US-funded Ukrainian radio station Radio Svoboda said two of its journalists had been arrested Monday morning while filming at the scene.

A Ukrainian police sniper takes aim during clashes with opposition protesters in Kiev  on January 20...
A Ukrainian police sniper takes aim during clashes with opposition protesters in Kiev, on January 20, 2014
Sergei Supinsky, AFP

Opposition leaders, including former boxing champion Vitali Klitschko and Arseniy Yatsenyuk, appeared unable to have any influence on the hard core of radical protesters and stopped short of supporting their actions.

But Ukraine's jailed former prime minister and opposition leader Yulia Tymoshenko came out in support of those clashing with police, saying she would be with them if she could.

"Protect Ukraine and do not fear anything. Ukraine has no defence other than you. You are heroes," she said in a statement read by her spokeswoman to AFP.

'The most repressive laws'

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 deplored the violence, saying the government was at fault for adopting the repressive laws.

The wreckage of a burnt bus is pictured as riot policemen stand in the background after night clashi...
The wreckage of a burnt bus is pictured as riot policemen stand in the background after night clashing with the opposition in the centre of the Ukrainian capital Kiev early on January 20, 2014
Anatolii Boiko, AFP

The new laws allow for 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.

The laws were passed last week in a chaotic show of hands in parliament and then signed into law by Yanukovych.

The curbs on protests were "the most solid package of repressive laws that I have seen enacted by a European parliament in decades," Swedish Foreign Minister Carl Bildt said in Brussels.

It was not clear who was behind the radicalisation of the protest, which appeared to have been a well-organised move. Ukrainian media linked the action to a hitherto little-known right-wing youth group called "Right Sector".

Special commission meets opposition

Fireworks grenade explodes during clashes between police and protesters in central Kiev on January 2...
Fireworks grenade explodes during clashes between police and protesters in central Kiev on January 20, 2014
Vasily Maximov, AFP

In an apparent attempt to find a compromise, Yanukovych ordered the creation of special commission headed by national security council secretary Andriy Klyuyev to solve the crisis, the presidency announced.

Given that Klyuyev was seen as a prime figure behind the violent dispersal of previous protests, the move was greeted with derision by many in the opposition.

Pro-Yanukovych lawmaker Anna German said the commission had already started its work and Monday evening met with representatives of the opposition.

They included former interior minister Yuriy Lutsenko and Tymoshenko's right-hand-man Olexander Turchinov. However Yanukovych was not involved and there was no word on any immediate progress.

On Sunday, some 200,000 people had filled Kiev's Independence Square and surrounding streets for a new mass rally in defiance of the protest curbs.

Protesters at the rally whistled and heckled the opposition leaders for their perceived inability to mount a stronger challenge with impatience mounting over conventional methods of protest.

Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych on Monday warned bloody clashes between protesters and police threatened all of Ukraine as new fighting rocked the capital Kiev.

The clashes, the worst in Kiev in recent times, marked a spiralling of tensions after two months of demonstrations against Yanukovych’s refusal to sign a pact for closer integration with the EU.

Amid growing fears the police could act to violently disperse the protest, Ukraine’s Prosecutor General Viktor Pshonka warned protesters to halt “mass rioting”, describing it as a crime against the state.

In a second day of clashes after 200 were injured in Sunday’s fighting, thousands of Ukrainians braved temperatures of minus 10 degrees Celsius (14 degrees Fahrenheit) to take part in the standoff with police.

Map of Kiev locating Independence Square  the site of an opposition protest in Ukraine

Map of Kiev locating Independence Square, the site of an opposition protest in Ukraine
, Graphics/AFP

In the epicentre of the clashes outside the entrance to the iconic Dynamo Kiev football stadium in central Kiev, both sides hunkered down behind barricades.

The protesters lobbed stones dug up from the cobbled road, flung Molotov cocktails and threw fireworks over a 20-metre (65-foot) no-man’s land at police lines.

Police responded by throwing stun grenades and occasionally using 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,” Yanukovych said in an address to the nation broadcast on state TV.

“I urge dialogue, compromise and calm in our native land,” he said in his first public comments on the violence.

A Ukrainian protester displays rubber bullets and pellets used by police during clashe with oppositi...

A Ukrainian protester displays rubber bullets and pellets used by police during clashe with opposition demonstrators in Kiev, on January 20, 2014
Sergei Supinsky, AFP

Showing increasing impatience with the events, he added: “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.

Tymoshenko backs radical protesters

A Ukrainian protester taunts riot police during clashes in the centre of Kiev  on January 20  2014

A Ukrainian protester taunts riot police during clashes in the centre of Kiev, on January 20, 2014
Sergei Supinsky, AFP

The burned-out wrecks of half a dozen police vehicles torched and destroyed the day earlier were used by the protesters as a barricade.

According to the Kiev health authorities, more than 100 protesters were wounded in Sunday’s clashes, with four people sustaining serious injuries to eyes and limbs.

The interior ministry said more than 100 members of the security forces had been wounded. The ministry added that 30 people had been arrested for mass rioting.

US-funded Ukrainian radio station Radio Svoboda said two of its journalists had been arrested Monday morning while filming at the scene.

A Ukrainian police sniper takes aim during clashes with opposition protesters in Kiev  on January 20...

A Ukrainian police sniper takes aim during clashes with opposition protesters in Kiev, on January 20, 2014
Sergei Supinsky, AFP

Opposition leaders, including former boxing champion Vitali Klitschko and Arseniy Yatsenyuk, appeared unable to have any influence on the hard core of radical protesters and stopped short of supporting their actions.

But Ukraine’s jailed former prime minister and opposition leader Yulia Tymoshenko came out in support of those clashing with police, saying she would be with them if she could.

“Protect Ukraine and do not fear anything. Ukraine has no defence other than you. You are heroes,” she said in a statement read by her spokeswoman to AFP.

‘The most repressive laws’

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 deplored the violence, saying the government was at fault for adopting the repressive laws.

The wreckage of a burnt bus is pictured as riot policemen stand in the background after night clashi...

The wreckage of a burnt bus is pictured as riot policemen stand in the background after night clashing with the opposition in the centre of the Ukrainian capital Kiev early on January 20, 2014
Anatolii Boiko, AFP

The new laws allow for 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.

The laws were passed last week in a chaotic show of hands in parliament and then signed into law by Yanukovych.

The curbs on protests were “the most solid package of repressive laws that I have seen enacted by a European parliament in decades,” Swedish Foreign Minister Carl Bildt said in Brussels.

It was not clear who was behind the radicalisation of the protest, which appeared to have been a well-organised move. Ukrainian media linked the action to a hitherto little-known right-wing youth group called “Right Sector”.

Special commission meets opposition

Fireworks grenade explodes during clashes between police and protesters in central Kiev on January 2...

Fireworks grenade explodes during clashes between police and protesters in central Kiev on January 20, 2014
Vasily Maximov, AFP

In an apparent attempt to find a compromise, Yanukovych ordered the creation of special commission headed by national security council secretary Andriy Klyuyev to solve the crisis, the presidency announced.

Given that Klyuyev was seen as a prime figure behind the violent dispersal of previous protests, the move was greeted with derision by many in the opposition.

Pro-Yanukovych lawmaker Anna German said the commission had already started its work and Monday evening met with representatives of the opposition.

They included former interior minister Yuriy Lutsenko and Tymoshenko’s right-hand-man Olexander Turchinov. However Yanukovych was not involved and there was no word on any immediate progress.

On Sunday, some 200,000 people had filled Kiev’s Independence Square and surrounding streets for a new mass rally in defiance of the protest curbs.

Protesters at the rally whistled and heckled the opposition leaders for their perceived inability to mount a stronger challenge with impatience mounting over conventional methods of protest.

AFP
Written By

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.

You may also like:

Tech & Science

Extremophile microbes from hot springs may hold the secret to the next generation of natural, eco-friendly sunscreen.

Tech & Science

Researchers found that higher levels of a natural dark chocolate compound are linked to signs of slower aging.

Entertainment

Luana Seu, director, photographer and producer chatted about being a storyteller and creative in the digital age.

World

Thousands protested in Paris - Copyright AFP Clarens SIFFROYMathieu Rabechault with AFP bureausThousands of people rallied in France on Saturday in a show of...