The Malta Independent on Sunday

Poroshenko sworn in as Ukraine’s president

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Ukraine’s new president on Saturday called for dialogue with the country’s east, gripped by a violent separatist insurgency, and for armed groups to lay down their weapons but said he won’t talk with rebels he called “gangsters and killers.”

Petro Poroshenko’s inaugural address after taking the oath of office in parliament gave little sign of a quick resolution to the conflict in the east, which Ukrainian officials say has left more than 200 people dead.

He also took a firm line on Russia’s annexation of Crimea this spring, insisting that the Black Sea peninsula, “was, is and will be Ukrainian.” He gave no indication of how Ukraine could regain control of Crimea, which Russian President Vladimir Putin has said was allotted to Ukraine unjustly under Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev.

Hours after the speech, Putin ordered security tightened along Russia’s border with Ukraine “to prevent illegal crossings,” Russian news agencies said. Ukraine claims that many of the insurgents in the east have come from Russia; Poroshenko on Saturday said he would offer a corridor for safe passage of “Russian militants” out of the country.

Rebel leaders in the east dismissed Poroshenko’s speech.

“This statement doesn’t concern us,” said the so-called prime minister of the insurgent Donetsk People’s Republic, Alexander Borodai, according to the RIA Novosti news agency.

Poroshenko offered amnesty to rebels who, “don’t have blood on their hands.” But “I don’t believe it,” said Valery Bolotov, the insurgent leader in the Luhansk region. Rebels in both Luhansk and Donetsk have declared their regions independen­t.

The new president promised, “I will bring you peace,” but did not indicate whether Ukrainian forces would scale back their offensives against the insurgency, which Ukraine says is fomented by Russia.

Russia has insisted on Ukraine ending its military operation in the east. Ambassador Mikhail Zurabov, representi­ng Moscow at the inaugurati­on, said Poroshenko’s statements, “sound reassuring,” but “for us, the principal thing is to stop the military operation,” adding that the insurgents should also stop fighting in order to bolster the delivery of humanitari­an aid, RIA Novosti reported.

As president, the 48-year-old Poroshenko is commander-inchief of the military and appoints the defence and foreign ministers. The prime minister is appointed by the parliament.

Poroshenko, often called, “The Chocolate King” because of the fortune he made as a confection­ery tycoon, was elected on 25 May. He replaces Oleksandr Turchynov, who served as interim president after Russia-friendly president Viktor Yanukovych fled the country in February following months of street protests against him.

The fall of Yanukovych aggravated long-brewing tensions in eastern and southern Ukraine, whose majority native Russian speakers denounced the new government as a nationalis­t putsch that aimed to suppress them.

Within a month, the Black Sea peninsula of Crimea was annexed by Russia after a secession referendum and an armed insurgency arose in the eastern provinces of Donetsk and Luhansk.

In his inaugural address, attended by dignitarie­s including US Vice President Joe Biden, Republican Senator John McCain and Democratic Representa­tive Marcy Kaptur, Poroshenko promised amnesty, “for those who do not have blood on their hands” and called for “dialogue with peaceful citizens in the east.

“I am calling on everyone who has taken arms in their hands; please lay down your arms,” he said, according to a translator. He also called for early regional elections in the east and promised to push for new powers to be allotted to regional government­s, but rejected calls for the federalisa­tion of Ukraine, which Moscow has advocated. (AP)

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