Oleksandr Turchinov: "This fight gave us the unity and strength of
a modern political nation"
Ukraine's new interim President
Oleksandr Turchynov has said the country will focus on closer integration with
the EU. Mr Turchynov was appointed following the dismissal of President Viktor
Yanukovych by MPs on Saturday. Mr Yanukovych's rejection of an EU-Ukraine trade pact triggered the protests
that toppled him. Russia, which had backed Mr Yanukovych, has recalled its ambassador to
Ukraine for consultations.
Earlier, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said the opposition "had in effect seized power in Kiev, refused to disarm and continued to place its bets on violence".
The US has said parliament's actions were legitimate and has warned Russia against military intervention. Mr Turchynov, a close ally of former Prime Minister Yulia Tymoshenko, gave a televised address late on Sunday, hours after his appointment as interim president. He vowed to set up a "government of the people", and said: "We have to return to the family of European countries."
He added: "We are ready for a dialogue with Russia... on a new, fair, equal and neighbourly basis,
acknowledging and taking into account Ukraine's European choice."
European Union foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton has announced she is visiting Kiev on
Monday to discuss EU support "for a lasting solution to the political crisis and measures to stabilize
the economic situation". Mr Turchynov said MPs had until Tuesday to form a new unity government.
Acting President Oleksandr Turchynov
Born in Dnipropetrovsk, eastern Ukraine, March 1964
Trained as metallurgist and economist
1980s - Local communist Komsomol youth leader
1993 - Economic adviser to ex-President Leonid Kuchma
1998-2007 - Elected to parliament
1999 - Deputy leader of Yulia Tymoshenko's Fatherland party
2004 - Campaigner in Orange Revolution
2005 - Head of Ukraine Security Service (SBU)
2007-2010 - Deputy PMFebruary 2014 - Parliament speaker, then acting president
Thousands of opposition supporters remain in Kiev's Independence Square, heeding opposition calls
not to disperse.
"I want to make Ukraine a modern European country," he said. "If I can do that through the
president's position, I will do my best."
Unverified: CCTV appeared to show Viktor Yanukovych fleeing
Kiev and he was reported headed for Russia
- Foreign Minister Leonid Kozhara and Education Minister Dmytro Tabachnyk were dismissed
- Arrest warrants were issued for former Incomes Minister Oleksandr Klimenko and former Prosecutor-General Viktor Pshonka
- Parliament lowered the official status of the Russian language by cancelling a law brought in by Mr Yanukovych
- Parliament also voted to seize Mr Yanukovych's luxury estate near Kiev, which protesters entered on Saturday
- Ukraine's new government may have a short time to win public support.
Many on Independence Square are sceptical of Ukraine's entire political
class, Ms Tymoshenko included, and may start searching soon for an entirely new
set of leaders.
Donetsk is Mr Yanukovych's home region and his support base, close to the border with Russia. It's Ukraine's industrial heartland, a mining centre and almost unanimously Russian-speaking. A few hundred pro-Yanukovych protesters gathered on the main square here. They called the anti-government demonstrators "fascists" and chanted pro-Russian slogans. A group surged towards the other side of the square, where a handful of anti-Yanukovych demonstrators were gathered. Police intervened. If this one city is so divided, just imagine the splits across the entire country.
Also on Sunday, US National Security Adviser Susan Rice warned Russia it would be a "grave mistake" to intervene militarily. Russia and the US have been on opposite sides during the Ukraine crisis, with the US, along with the EU, backing the opposition.
Earlier, German Chancellor Angela Merkel was reported to have called Ms Tymoshenko and urged her to work for unity. Mrs Merkel also called Russian President Vladimir Putin on Sunday to discuss the crisis; both agreed that the country's "territorial integrity must be safeguarded", her spokesman said.
There has been a fear that the crisis may exacerbate divisions between the Russian-leaning east of the country and the more pro-EU west. Germany is trying to act as a broker in the conflict and to assuage Russian fears that it will be threatened if Ukraine moves closer to the European Union. Some German government MPs have called for swift financial aid to Ukraine, possibly involving the International Monetary Fund.
Donetsk is Mr Yanukovych's home region and his support base, close to the border with Russia. It's Ukraine's industrial heartland, a mining centre and almost unanimously Russian-speaking. A few hundred pro-Yanukovych protesters gathered on the main square here. They called the anti-government demonstrators "fascists" and chanted pro-Russian slogans. A group surged towards the other side of the square, where a handful of anti-Yanukovych demonstrators were gathered. Police intervened. If this one city is so divided, just imagine the splits across the entire country.
Also on Sunday, US National Security Adviser Susan Rice warned Russia it would be a "grave mistake" to intervene militarily. Russia and the US have been on opposite sides during the Ukraine crisis, with the US, along with the EU, backing the opposition.
Earlier, German Chancellor Angela Merkel was reported to have called Ms Tymoshenko and urged her to work for unity. Mrs Merkel also called Russian President Vladimir Putin on Sunday to discuss the crisis; both agreed that the country's "territorial integrity must be safeguarded", her spokesman said.
There has been a fear that the crisis may exacerbate divisions between the Russian-leaning east of the country and the more pro-EU west. Germany is trying to act as a broker in the conflict and to assuage Russian fears that it will be threatened if Ukraine moves closer to the European Union. Some German government MPs have called for swift financial aid to Ukraine, possibly involving the International Monetary Fund.
Moscow recently agreed to provide $15bn (11bn euros) to support the Ukrainian government. If Russia withdrew that offer, the debate in Berlin is whether the European Union could replace the Russian money and how that might affect relations with Moscow.
Earlier, a US official said US Treasury Secretary Jack Lew had discussed Ukraine with Russian Finance Minister Anton Siluanov on the sidelines of the G20 meeting in Sydney. Mr Siluanov reportedly left open the question of whether Russia will pay the next instalment of financial help for Ukraine, worth $2bn.
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