Montreal Gazette

Three ex-presidents show support for Ukrainian protesters

European officials say both sides remain resistant to compromise

- YURAS KARMANAU AND JIM HEINTZ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

KYIV — As protests roiled the Ukrainian capital and other cities, three of the country’s former presidents on Wednesday gave support to the demonstrat­ors and warned the tensions could be spinning into an uncontaina­ble crisis.

Separately, the head of the Council of Europe, the continent’s main human rights body, met with government officials and opposition members to try to persuade them to enter into dialogue, but said many in Ukraine are resistant to compromise.

The head of Ukraine’s police ordered his officers not to use force against peaceful demonstrat­ors, a statement indicating that officials are aware of how the club-swinging dispersal of protesters this week galvanized already strong anger over the president’s shelving of a long-awaited pact with the European Union.

Thousands rallied again Wednesday night in Kyiv’s central square — where protesters have erected barricades on feeder streets — and other demonstrat­ors were blocking the cabinet of ministers, a show of determinat­ion to press their demands for the government to step down.

But the government is showing no sign of yielding and a resolution remained elusive.

In a statement released to Ukrainian news agencies, Ukraine’s first three post-Soviet leaders said they “express solidarity with the peaceful civil actions of hundreds of thousands of young Ukrainians.

“However, a solution to the crisis has not been found. The crisis is deepening and we see risks of losing control over the situation,” said the statement from Leonid Krav- chuk, Leonid Kuchma and Viktor Yushchenko.

Council of Europe head Thorbjorn Jagland said after his meeting with opposition figures and Prime Minister Mykola Azarov that “we are trying to find out whether and how a dialogue can be establishe­d. But I have also seen that too many are focusing on how to aggravate the situation.”

He did not specify if the aggregator­s were among officials, protest leaders or fringe elements.

Opposition leaders remained vehement. “The blockade of administra­tive offices will continue,” declared Oleh Tyanhybok, head of the nationalis­t Svoboda party.

 ?? VIKTOR DRACHEV/ AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? A protester holds a placard showing Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych, left, and Prime Minister Mykola Azarov behind bars at a rally Wednesday.
VIKTOR DRACHEV/ AFP/GETTY IMAGES A protester holds a placard showing Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych, left, and Prime Minister Mykola Azarov behind bars at a rally Wednesday.

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