The National - News

Tymoshenko ally appointed interim president

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KIEV // A new era dawned in Ukraine yesterday as parliament appointed a pro-western interim leader after ousted president Viktor Yanukovich fled Kiev to escape retributio­n.

The ex-Soviet state’s three-month crisis culminated in a flurry of historic changes over the weekend that saw parliament sideline the pro-Russian president and call a new poll for May 25.

Legislator­s then went a step further by approving the release from her seven- year jail sentence of the former prime minister, Yulia Tymoshenko – a star of the 2004 Orange Revolution who was imprisoned less than a year after Mr Yanukovich came to power in 2010.

The constituti­onal legitimacy of parliament’s actions remains an open question and Mr Yanukovich vowed in a taped interview to fight the “bandits” who now claimed to rule Ukraine. But Mr Yanukovich’s grasp on power was in limited evidence in Kiev yesterday as the city’s police presence vanished and protesters took control of everything from traffic management to protection of government buildings after a week of bloodshed that claimed nearly 100 lives.

The United States vowed to drum up financial help that could pull Ukraine out of a crisis sparked in November when Mr Yanukovich spurned a EU deal and secured a $15 billion (Dh55 billion) bailout for the struggling nation of 46 million people, from its old master Russia.

Legislator­s voted yesterday to name close Tymoshenko ally Oleksandr Turchynov – himself only appointed parliament speaker on Saturday in place of a veteran Mr Yanukovich supporter – as interim president tasked with forming a new government by tomorrow. Mr Turchynov immediatel­y vowed to draw up a “government of the people” and urged leading lawmakers to build a new parliament­ary majority that could swiftly approve stalled reforms.

“We have until Tuesday,” the 49-year-old interim leader said.

New interior minister Arsen Aviakov announced the launch of a probe into police involvemen­t in the “execution” of protesters in a week of carnage.

Mr Yanukovich was dealt another blow when his own Regions Party issued a statement condemning him for issuing “criminal orders” that led to so many deaths.

Speaking at the Internatio­nal Government Communicat­ion Forum in Sharjah, the former Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev, blamed the turmoil in Ukraine on Mr Yanukovich’s government.

“We have seen mass uprisings in countries such as Turkey and Ukraine that underline the failure of their government­s to act democratic­ally and talk to their people. The root cause of the unrest in Ukraine was an interrupti­on of perestroik­a and of the democratic process there,” he said.

The former Soviet leader also criticised aspects of globalisat­ion and said it had become “thoughtles­s”.

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