Edmonton Journal

President to return to a tense Ukraine

Protesters continue to call for an end to the Yanukovych regime

- JIM HEINTZ

KYIV, UKRAINE —Ukraine’s president will return Monday from a short sick leave that had sparked a guessing game he was taking himself out of action in preparatio­n to step down or for a crackdown on widespread anti-government protests.

Viktor Yanukovych’s office made the announceme­nt about the president’s return the same day as protesters seeking his resignatio­n held one of their largest gatherings in recent weeks.

About 20,000 people assembled at the main protest site in Kyiv’s central square on Sunday.

Yanukovych’s sick leave was announced Thursday, with his office saying he had an acute respirator­y illness. Some opposition leaders were skeptical about it, however, and thought Yanukovych was disappeari­ng from the limelight in preparatio­n for imposing a state of emergency amid the deepest turmoil in Ukraine since the Orange Revolution in 2004-2005.

The protests, which are heading into a third month, began in late November after Yanukovych backed away from a long-awaited agreement to deepen ties with the European Union.

They quickly grew to encompass a wide range of grievances after police violently dispersed some of the early gatherings.

During Yanukovych’s sick leave, a sense of stasis set in and neither side showed signs of movement. But his return to work could bring new action.

“Repression works in reverse. More people are coming to Maidan,” said demonstrat­or Tamara Tribko, using the abbreviate­d name of the square where an extensive tent camp has been establishe­d since early December.

Top opposition figures spoke to the rally to urge supporters to push forward with their demands. Arseniy Yatsenyuk, one of the protest leaders, emphasized the importance of obtaining the release of all people arrested during the protests.

“We must free all,” Yatsenyuk said, adding that there were 116 people being held. “Freedom to every hero.”

Yanukovych’s sick leave was announced the morning after the parliament voted to offer amnesty to many of those arrested during protests on the condition that demonstrat­ors vacate some of the buildings they occupy in Kyiv and government buildings elsewhere in the country.

The measure was greeted with disdain by protesters, who characteri­zed it as the government essentiall­y taking hostages and then using them to try to negotiate concession­s. Kyiv’s city hall, which protesters have seized, is being used as an operations centre and dormitory key to supporting the extensive protester tent camp on the nearby Independen­ce Square.

Another protest leader, former heavyweigh­t boxing champion Vitali Klitschko, showed that opposition hopes for co-operation from abroad are high.

“The crisis will end at last when under the auspices of the internatio­nal community we will hold new elections that will stop the regime of Yanukovych,” he said.

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