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Europe |
Kiev Has Deal; Russia and Protesters Appear Wary |
2014-02-22 |
![]() Russia, which joined France, Germany and Poland in mediating the settlement, introduced a further element of uncertainty by declining to sign the accord, which reduces the power of Mr. Yanukovych, a firm ally of Moscow. This stirred fears that Moscow might now work to undo the deal through economic and other pressures, as it did last year to subvert a proposed trade deal between Ukraine and the European Union. The developments cast a shadow over a hard-fought accord that mandates early presidential elections by December, a swift return to a 2004 constitution that sharply limited the president’s powers and the establishment within 10 days of a “government of national trust.” In a series of votes that followed the accord and reflected Parliament’s determination to make the settlement work, lawmakers moved to free Mr. Yanukovych’s imprisoned rival, former Prime Minister Yulia V. Tymoshenko, grant blanket amnesty to all antigovernment protesters and provide financial aid to the hundreds of wounded and families of the dead. |
Posted by:Steve White |
#2 The gist of the deal: You stop protesting and we'll stop killing you (at least until things quiet down a bit, and we've examined the video, at which time certain people will start to have 'accidents' or maybe just disappear). |
Posted by: ed in texas 2014-02-22 07:39 |
#1 Reports Prez has decamped to Eastern Ukraine and 'rebels' now control Kiev. Rather more to this than reported to date. Putin, I think it's your move next. |
Posted by: phil_b 2014-02-22 03:11 |