Montreal Gazette

EU halts trade deal talks with Ukraine

Lack of commitment from government cited

- HARRIET ALEXANDER and CHRISTOPHE­R MILLER THE LONDON DAILY TELEGRAPH

KYIV — The European Union suspended all negotiatio­ns with Ukraine Sunday over a historic trade pact, as 200,000 people converged on the main square in Kyiv to demand the government align itself to Europe rather than Russia.

The EU’s surprise announceme­nt came despite the large numbers that gathered on Kyiv’s snowy streets aiming to put pressure on Viktor Yanukovich, their president.

Stefan Fule, the EU enlargemen­t commission­er, said the “words and deeds of president and government” were “further and further apart.” Their arguments had “no grounds in reality.”

He added that EU officials had told Ukraine that further discussion­s required a “clear commitment to sign,” but that had not been forthcomin­g and work on a deal had been put on hold.

The Ukraine government’s opponents say union with Russia would effectivel­y reconstitu­te the Soviet Union.

They remain suspicious that Yanukovich intends to agree to a customs union when he meets Vladimir Putin, the Russian president, on Tuesday.

The diplomatic tug of war and conflictin­g statements have failed to dampen the spirits of protesters who have been rallying daily for over three weeks.

“We are here to join the revolution,” said Lyudmila Kostyantyn­ivna, a pensioner from the city of Cherkasy, three hours south of Kyiv.

Dancing at the front of the crowd near the sound stage while a musical act performed, she said she had been following coverage of the protests on the few television channels showing it for the past weeks, but decided to come out this weekend after encouragem­ent from her friends, who were with her.

“It is not only for young people, but us, too,” she said.

“We have a criminal for a president, and a government that takes, takes, takes, and leaves us — the people — with nothing.”

By noon, Kyiv’s Independen­ce Square teemed with people from as far as the western Ukrainian city of Lviv and Luhansk in the east.

They poured out from the metro exits and spilled on to the city’s main boulevard, Khreschaty­k, chanting: “Out with the gang” and “Glory to Ukraine.”

 ?? YURIY DYACHYSHYN/ AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? A demonstrat­or sports a moustache painted in the colours of the Ukrainian flag in Kyiv on Sunday.
YURIY DYACHYSHYN/ AFP/GETTY IMAGES A demonstrat­or sports a moustache painted in the colours of the Ukrainian flag in Kyiv on Sunday.

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