Friday, December 6, 2013

Russia’s PM rebukes West for taking sides on Ukraine protests

Russia’s prime minister, Dmitry Medvedev, has criticized the visits of top Western officials to Ukrainian anti-government protests, calling them "interference in Ukraine’s internal affairs."
He was referring to the two-day visit of German Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle to Ukraine for an OSCE summit, which he started Thursday evening with a tour to the heart of the ongoing protest. Accompanied by two of the opposition leaders, the German minister toured Kiev’s Independence Square and European Square, the two main venues for the ongoing demonstrations.
“Excuse me, but taking part in such actions is called simply interference in internal affairs,” Medvedev said about Westerwelle’s visit.

“I wonder how our German partners would feel if, for instance, the Russian Foreign Minister just went to some gathering, which was violating German regulations. I doubt they would take it as a friendly step,” Medvedev said.
Westerwelle is far from the only western political figures who has come to speak to Ukrainian protesters over the past few weeks. Among those flocking to Kiev to cheer the activists were Poland’s ex-Prime Minister Jaroslaw Kaczynski, who currently heads the conservative PiS party, Victoria Nuland, US Assistant Secretary of State for European and Eurasian Affairs, Loreta Grauziniene, the speaker of the Lithuanian Parliament, and the foreign ministers of the Netherlands and Canada, Frans Timmermans and John Baird, respectively. 

As he rebuked the parade of approving officials, Medvedev called on the West to let Ukrainians settle their differences on their own.
“All those problems must be taken care of by the Ukrainian government and the Ukrainian people, not foreigners, not Russia. But other countries must act correctly as well,” he said.
He also dismissed the popular narrative that explains Ukraine’s decision not to sign a key trade agreement with the EU, which sparked the protest, as a result of overwhelming diplomatic pressure from Russia.
“They made calculations and realized that they are not prepared for it at the moment. It’s their own business. We simply pointed their attention to the problems and said they would face them,” Medvedev said.
Ukraine has been in the grip of mass public protest since late November, when the government announced that it would not sign the much-anticipated Association Agreement with the EU. Pro-EU integration crowds took over main squares in Kiev and also staged protests in other Ukrainian cities.
The confrontation with the government escalated last week with the brutal eviction of a protest camp in the capital, which was followed by violent riots and the seizure of several governmental buildings by the activists.
At the moment, the opposition is demanding the resignation of the government and early presidential election – demands that the authorities reject. 
rt.com
6/12/13
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5 comments :

  1. Medvedev Denies Russia Pressured Ukraine to Abandon EU Deal...

    MOSCOW, December 6 (RIA Novosti) – Ukraine decided independently to abandon a long-anticipated trade deal with the European Union, Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev said Friday, denying that Moscow pressured its neighbor into changing direction.

    “They realized that at the moment, they’re not ready for this,” he said in a televised interview on Russia’s state TV channel Rossiya 1. “In all probability, they decided at least to postpone the signing. We [Russia] just focused on the problems [of the deal], telling them [Ukraine] what they might be.”

    Massive anti-government protests began in Kiev last month after Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovich backed down from signing the long-expected landmark deals with the EU and pledged instead to focus on strengthening ties with Moscow. The move came just after he had flown to Russia for a secret meeting with Russia's President Vladimir Putin.

    Medvedev said Ukraine alone should decide its next moves, and spoke out against the involvement of foreigners, including Russians, in what he called the country's internal affairs.

    In the runup toward the proposed signing of the EU agreement, Russia warned Ukraine about the consequences of the deal for its relations with Moscow, imposed trade sanctions on some Ukrainian goods and repeated earlier demands for it to pay its massive gas bills.

    The Russian prime minister expressed a sense of kinship with Ukraine, however, saying Russia is paying attention to its southern neighbor's situation.

    “We are not indifferent to what is happening there,” Medvedev said. “It’s a country that’s very close to us, people living there are very close to us, and in addition, Ukraine is for us a very important trade and economic partner, like we are for [them].”
    http://en.ria.ru/world/20131206/185306457/Medvedev-Denies-Russia-Pressured-Ukraine-to-Abandon-EU-Deal.html
    6/12/13

    ReplyDelete
  2. Treffen der Staatschefs von Russland und der Ukraine:Keine russischen Rabatte für die Ukraine.......

    Rabatte für russische Gaslieferungen an die Ukraine wird es vorerst nicht geben. Russlands Präsident Wladimir Putin und sein ukrainischer Amtskollege Viktor Janukowitsch konnten sich bei einem Treffen im russischen Sotschi nicht auf ein entsprechendes Abkommen einigen.

    Ebenfalls keine Einigung gab es über einen Beitritt der Ukraine zu der von Russland geführten Zollunion. Das Thema sei bei dem Treffen nicht behandelt worden, sagte ein Sprecher Putins. Dem ukrainischen Außenminister Leonid Koschara zufolge sprachen die beiden Staatschefs jedoch über ein weitreichendes Partnerschaftsabkommen...............http://www.tagesschau.de/ausland/ukraine564.html
    7/12/13

    ReplyDelete
  3. Protests Reach Crunch Stage in Ukraine As Russia Deal Looms...

    KIEV, December 7 (RIA Novosti) – Protests entering their third week in the Ukrainian capital looked set to gain new momentum Saturday as President Viktor Yanukovych committed his former Soviet nation to greater economic ties with Russia.

    Thousands of people, many of them waving flags of Ukraine and opposition political parties, assembled in Independence Square to listen to speeches throughout the day calling for the government’s ouster and condemning last week’s heavy-handed treatment by police of demonstrators camped in the square.

    Rallies in Kiev and in other cities across Ukraine erupted late last month in reaction to the government’s decision to back away from a deal to sign association agreement and free trade deals with the EU.

    It is unclear to what extent the three opposition parties most actively engaged in the protest – Batkivshchyna (Fatherland), Udar (Punch) and Svoboda (Freedom) – are in fact in control of this wave of discontent, but they have served as its public face and have laid out conditions for negotiations with the authorities.

    The protest movement appeared to be losing momentum until November 30, when police aggressively cleared Independence Square, sparking outrage and prompting hundreds of thousands to rally on the spot the following day.

    Talking to reporters at the united opposition movement’s headquarters, Udar leader and heavyweight boxer Vitaly Klitschko demanded punishment for those involved in the raid on the square and the resignation of the Cabinet as a precondition for talks to create a technical government.

    Arseny Yatsenyuk, who leads the Batkivshchina faction in parliament, said the technical government could undertake the task of signing the EU pacts abandoned by Yanukovych.............http://en.ria.ru/world/20131207/185342645/Protests-Reach-Crunch-Stage-in-Ukraine-As-Russia-Deal-Looms.html
    7/12/13

    ReplyDelete
  4. Ukraine’s Security Service opens criminal case over attempt to seize state power...

    KIEV, December 08, 18:30 /ITAR-TASS/. Ukraine’s Security Service has launched an investigation over reported actions aiming to seize state power in the country, the press service of the Ukrainian Security Service said on Sunday.

    “A criminal case was opened over actions aiming to seize state power,” the press service said. “On December 8, the register of pre-trial investigations was supplemented with data related to illegal actions committed by certain politicians to seize state power.” Criminal proceedings were opened on charges of committing actions aimed at violent overthrow of the constitutional system or at seizing state power, which is punishable by a prison term of from five to ten years.
    http://en.itar-tass.com/world/710743
    8/12/13

    ReplyDelete
  5. German FM warns Ukraine of taking repressing actions against protesters...

    BERLIN, December 11. /ITAR-TASS/. German Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle has warned the Ukrainian government of taking repressive measures against pro-European Union protesters in Kiev.

    “In a democratic state peaceful protests cannot simply be banned or dispersed with the use of power by the government,” he said in Berlin on Wednesday.

    “A protest is vital manifestation of people’s intention to move towards European Ukraine,” Westerwelle said. “Instead of protecting Maidan (Kiev’s central square) from the opposition and banning protests, it is necessary to start real political dialogue. Kiev knows quite well that the European Union and the Council of Europe are ready to provide assistance in this issue.
    http://en.itar-tass.com/world/711091
    11/12/13

    ReplyDelete

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