Sunday Times 2
Ukraine lawmaker says President has promised to resign
View(s):KIEV, Feb 22, 2014 (AFP) -A member of Ukraine’s parliament said today that President Viktor Yanukovych has promised to submit his resignation in response to violence that left nearly 100 dead in anti-government unrest.
Batkivshchyna (Fatherland) opposition party lawmaker Mykola Katerynchuk told reporters that Ukraine’s embattled leader said he would resign in a conversation with protest leader Arseniy Yatsenyuk.
The regime of Ukraine’s president appeared close to collapse today as the emboldened opposition took control of central Kiev and key government and parliament positions and voted to immediately free its jailed leader Yulia Tymoshenko.
An emerging power vacuum gripped the charred heart of the capital a day after Viktor Yanukovych and his political rivals signed a Western-brokered peace deal to end the ex-Soviet nation’s worst crisis since independence from Moscow in 1991.
Key government buildings were without police protection and baton-armed protesters dressed in military fatigues wandered freely across the president’s once-fortified compound.
“We have taken the perimeter of the president’s residence under our control for security reasons,” Mykola Velichkovich of the opposition’s self-declared Independence Square defence unit told AFP.
Thousands of mourners meanwhile brought carnations and roses to dozens of spots across Kiev’s iconic Independence Square on which protesters were shot dead by police in a week of carnage that claimed nearly 100 lives.
The Ukrainian police appeared to retreat today from their entrenched defence of the pro-Russian government by releasing a statement in support of “the people” and “rapid change”.
“The police is at the service of the people and completely shares its aspirations for rapid changes,” the interior ministry said in a statement.
“We pay homage to the dead.” The next test for the police will come Sunday when a deadline expires for protesters to relinquish public spaces such as Independence Square — the focal point of unrest that Yanukovych sparked in November by ditching an historic EU agreement in favour of closer ties with old master Moscow.
The Ukrainian protests have escalated into a Cold War-style confrontation pitting attempts by the Kremlin to keep reins on its historic fiefdom and Western efforts to bring the economically struggling nation of 46 million into their fold.
Vote to free Tymoshenko
The deal on Friday called for the holding of early presidential elections by December and a forming of a unity government.
But signs of the authorities’ slipping grip on power were heightened by a bold push by parliament leaders to force Yanukovych to stand down immediately and to immediately free the jailed Tymoshenko.
“We must, as the people demand, adopt a resolution calling on Yanukovych to immediately resign,” boxer turned opposition leader Vitali Klitschko told deputies in Ukraine’s Verhovna Rada parliament.
Klitschko called for presidential elections to be held by May 25 and said the parliament was Ukraine’s “only legitimate body of power.”