Ukraine crisis: Are there any winners?
Ukraine has been marking the anniversary of protests which brought down the government and set Russia on a collision course with the West.
A decision by former President Viktor Yanukovich to freeze ties with Europe set off violent confrontations in the capital, Kyiv. Hundreds died in months of demonstrations, which forced the pro-Russian Yanukovich to flee the country.
Russia went on to annexe the Crimean Peninsula and back a pro-Russian insurgency in eastern Ukraine, setting off dangerous new diplomatic tensions with the West.
Speaking at an anniversary rally, Yanukovich’s successor, Petro Poroshenko, said: “The things which had been a dream one year ago are becoming a reality. It’s not happening as quickly as we wished. The freedom of speech, the freedom of choice, the freedom of protest has returned.
“From dictatorship we have been transformed into parliamentary-presidential democracy, we have signed, ratified and finally started to execute the association agreement with the EU.”
But with Ukraine a divided nation, and Russia losing its influence over the former Soviet republic, can there be any real winners?
Presenter: Mike Hanna
Guests:
Pavel Felgenhauer – Moscow-based foreign policy and political analyst.
James Sherr – Associate Fellow for the Russia and Eurasia Programme at Chatham House.
Mychailo Wynnyckyj – Associate Professor at Kyiv-Mohyla Academy.