Ukraine Crimea: Rival rallies confront one another
BBC News online -- 26 February 2014
Pro-Kiev
and pro-Moscow protesters have scuffled in Ukraine's Crimea region, as
tensions increase following last week's ousting of President Viktor
Yanukovych.
Only a police cordon separated the rallies - one pro-Russian, the other involving Crimean Tatars and people backing Ukraine's change of government.
A new cabinet is due to be unveiled in the capital Kiev in a few hours' time.
It is widely expected that a number of activists from Kiev's main protest camp, the Maidan, will be offered ministerial roles.
Any new cabinet will face a daunting set of challenges, with many areas of government in Ukraine needing urgent reform, the BBC's David Stern in Kiev reports.
In a separate development, the interim authorities have disbanded the elite Berkut police units, which are blamed for the deaths of dozens of protesters in the Ukrainian capital last week.
Thousands of people took part in the two rival rallies in Crimea's administrative capital ahead of a planned session of the region's parliament, where the issue of Crimea's status had been initially expected to be raised.
At the scene
The violence in Simferopol illustrates the complexity of the situation in Crimea - a situation made worse by the current power vacuum on the southern Ukrainian peninsula.
Angry Russian Crimeans are denouncing the new government in Kiev, who they fear will undermine their links to Russia. We even saw them chanting "Berkut", the name of the riot police who killed so many protesters last week.
But today, Crimea's Tatars turned up in force to show their support for the new government in Kiev. That's because of their long-running suspicion of Russia. They were the original occupants of Crimea. They were first invaded by the Russians in the 18th Century, and then kicked out by Stalin in the 1940s, only returning to Crimea in the 1990s.
However, parliamentary speaker
Volodymyr Konstantinov later said MPs would not discuss any secession by
Crimea, which currently enjoys autonomy within Ukraine.
Mr Konstantinov described as "provocation" earlier media reports on the issue.In Simferopol, Crimean Tatars chanted "Glory to Ukraine!", while the pro-Russian activists responded with "Russia!"
A body of an elderly man was found during the rallies, Crimea's health ministry said in a statement.
It said the unidentified man had no signs of injures, and probably died from a heart attack.
After the rallies, Crimean Tatar leader Refat Chubarov called on activists - including ethnic Russians - to form self-defence units to prevent any violence or provocations, Ukrainska Pravda news website reports.
Crimea - where ethnic Russians are in a majority - was transferred from Russia to Ukraine in 1954.
Ethnic Ukrainians loyal to Kiev and Muslim Tatars - whose animus to Russia stretches back to the horrors of Stalin's deportations during World War II - have formed an alliance to oppose any move back towards Moscow.
The change of government in Kiev has raised questions over the future of Russia's naval bases in the Crimean port city of Sevastopol, the lease for which was extended until 2042 by Mr Yanukovych.
Most experts believe the new leadership will not push for the withdrawal of the Russian fleet, as this could further threaten Ukraine's internal stability as well as the country's fragile relations with Russia, the BBC's Ilya Abishev reports.
Crimea
- Autonomous republic within Ukraine
- Transferred from Russia in 1954
- Ethnic Russians - 58.5%*
- Ethnic Ukrainians - 24.4%*
- Crimean Tatars - 12.1%*
- Source: Ukraine census 2001
A statement issued by three
former Ukrainian presidents on Wednesday - Leonid Kravchuk, Leonid
Kuchma and Viktor Yushchenko - condemned what it said was Russian
interference in Crimean politics.
Also on Wednesday, Russian President Vladimir Putin ordered a snap drill to test the combat readiness of troops in central and western Russia, near the border with Ukraine.
Such checks are not uncommon, although the timing is seen as significant, correspondents say.
Russia, along with the US, UK and France, pledged to uphold the territorial integrity of Ukraine in a memorandum signed in 1994.
Ukraine's interim President Oleksandr Turchynov has expressed concern about what he called the "serious threat" of separatism following the ousting of Mr Yanukovych.
Russia has portrayed the ousting of Mr Yanukovych as a violent seizure of power by the opposition, while EU countries have largely backed the change in government.
Analysis
Ukraine's new leaders are tasked with not just forming a new government, but also stabilising the country, finding the fugitive former President Viktor Yanukovych, and staving off a looming financial catastrophe. They must also transform the basic way the country is governed and its economy is run.
In order to unlock billions of dollars in emergency loans from the International Monetary Fund, interim officials must agree to reforms in key areas such as the gas and agriculture industries. They must also overhaul the country's judiciary, where, in the words of one expert, Adrian Karatnycky of the Atlantic Council, court rulings were decided by "a phone call from the presidential administration."
And there are many more areas. All carry heavy political and economic risks, and could spark a backlash from interested or affected groups - for instance, the Berkut themselves. Or Ukrainians forced to pay higher gas prices. Or the industry tycoons, who will see their revenues diminish. But not doing anything will also unleash a reaction - especially from the still-present protesters on the Maidan. The government can't afford not to act.
In Kiev, acting Interior Minister Arsen Avakov announced that the Berkut police units had been disbanded.
The Berkut units reportedly had 4,000-5,000 members stationed across Ukraine.
The much-despised Berkut are just one part of the security and law enforcement agencies, which have long been accused by human rights groups and local citizens of human rights abuses.
Also on Wednesday, Mr Turchynov announced that he had assumed the duties of the head of the armed forces.
President Yanukovych fled Kiev at the weekend and his whereabouts are still unknown.
Interim authorities have issued a warrant for his arrest, and on Tuesday parliament voted in favour of trying him at the International Criminal Court (ICC) in The Hague.
The fugitive president is accused of being behind the deaths of more than 100 protesters at the hands of riot police.
Yanukovych's flight from Kiev
- 21 Feb: leaves Kiev for Kharkiv on helicopter; stays overnight in state residence
- 22 Feb: flies by helicopter to Donetsk airport; tries to leave on private jet but stopped by border guards; leaves by car for Crimea
- 23 Feb: arrives in Balaklava, Crimea, and stays briefly in a private spa before making aborted attempt to reach Belbek airport
- Dismisses most of his security detail; leaves Balaklava in a three-car convoy with some guards and presidential administration head Andriy Kliuyev
- Source: Acting Interior Minister Arsen Avakov
Labels: Conflict, Human Rights, Russia, Ukraine
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