Ukraine parliament has first sitting after polls
KYIV, Nov 27 — Ukraine’s parliament today held its first sitting since pro-Western parties won a crushing poll victory, with lawmakers facing a mammoth task to drag the war-wracked nation back from the brink of collapse.
Deputies in the new-look Verkhovna Rada chamber sang the national anthem before holding a minute’s silence in memory of those killed in Kyiv protests and the conflict in east Ukraine.
They then read in unison an oath to serve the Ukrainian people.
Lawmakers looked set later today to confirm current rime minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk, who will remain in his post at the head of a new pro-Western coalition hammered out after weeks of haggling.
Pro-European politicians won an overwhelming majority at an October election and agreed last week to form a new coalition led by the parties of Yatsenyuk and president Petro Poroshenko.
The coalition has sworn to stick to Ukraine’s pro-Western trajectory in the face of Russian support for a bloody separatist conflict in the east and pledged to pass a law confirming Kyiv’s desire to join NATO.
Over 4,300 people have been killed in the fighting between pro-Moscow rebels and government forces since April.
The crisis has sent relations between Russia and the West to their lowest ebb since the Cold War. — AFP