Ukrainians hold mass rally over Yanukovich’s U-turn on Europe
KYIV (Reuters) – More than 100,000 Ukrainians, waving flags and chanting “Down with the Gang!” streamed through central Kyiv on Sunday to protest against what they called President Viktor Yanukovich’s broken promises to integrate with the European Union.
The opposition rally, by far the biggest seen in the Ukrainian capital since the Orange Revolution nine years ago, came a day after a police crackdown on protesters which inflamed demonstrators further after Yanukovich’s U-turn on Europe.
In a bid to defuse tensions ahead of the rally, Yanukovich issued a statement saying he would do everything in his power to speed up Ukraine’s moves toward the European Union.
In a sea of blue and gold, the colours of both the EU and Ukrainian flags, protesters flooded the streets of central Kyiv, angered by Yanukovich’s decision last month to forego signing a landmark EU deal in favour of closer ties with Kyiv’s former Soviet master, Russia.
The crowds then moved on to Independence Square, the site of the pro-EU rally that police violently broke up on Saturday.
Interior Minister warned that police would respond to any disorder and said Ukraine had no place among the ranks of countries like Libya or Tunisia, where popular uprisings overthrew old guard leadership.
“If there are any calls to disorder, we will respond,” Interfax reported Interior Minister Vitaly Zakharchenko as saying.
But riot police, who had sealed off part of Independence Square following Saturday’s crackdown, withdrew as the marchers approached the square.
Opposition leaders including heavyweight boxing champion turned opposition politician Vitaly Klitschko, a likely challenger for the presidency in 2015, were due to address the crowds.
Sunday’s rally also marked the anniversary of a 1991 referendum that ushered in Ukraine’s independence from the then-crumbling Soviet Union.
UNPRECEDENTED CRACKDOWN
Saturday’s violence, in which police used stun grenades and batons against mostly young and peaceful protesters, was unprecedented in Kyiv and attracted sharp criticism domestically and abroad.
“I want my children to live in a country where they don’t beat young people,” said Andrey, 33, the manager of a large firm, who declined to give his surname for fear of reprisals against him.
“I am glad we woke up after a ten year nap,” he said referring to the 2004-5 Orange Revolution, co-led by now jailed former prime minister Yulia Tymoshenko, which thwarted Yanukovich’s first bid at the presidency.
In what was likely an attempt to soothe anger, Kyiv’s police chief offered his resignation to the Interior Ministry after taking personal responsibility for riot police’s violence, Interfax news agency reported.
German Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle called on the Ukrainian authorities to protect the peaceful demonstrators “from any kind of intimidation and violence” on Sunday.
“I will do everything in my power to accelerate the process of moving Ukraine closer to the European Union,” Yanukovich said in his statement.
He also repeated the need to balance Ukraine’s European integration with its own national interests.
“Ukraine has made its own geopolitical choice. We are a European people and our path has been historically determined. But at the same time, according to my deep conviction, our government should integrate into an association of European nations as an equal partner to be respected,” he said.
Prime Minister Mykola Azarov said in a televised interview late on Saturday that Yanukovich would travel to Moscow to work on a ‘roadmap’ for new economic cooperation after a planned trip to China on Dec 3-6, though he gave no dates.
(Additional reporting by Madeline Chambers in Berlin; Writing by Thomas Grove and Richard Balmforth)