Ukraine PM, government quit to ease crisis
Prime Minister Mykola Azarov and his entire government resigned yesterday in a bid to defuse Ukraine’s deadly crisis, giving in to months of pressure as parliament scrapped anti-protest laws that had infuriated the opposition.
Azarov said he had taken a “personal decision” to resign to keep Ukraine together as a state, as parliament met in an emergency session to vote on reforms and amendments backed by President Viktor Yanukovych.
Parliament overwhelmingly voted to scrap anti-protest laws that sparked the current crisis when the ruling party pushed them through the Verkhovna Rada in a show-of-hands vote on January 16.
In a morning announcement that took the opposition by surprise, Azarov yielded to months of pressure from the opposition who made his resignation a key demand of protests based in Independence Square in Kiev.
Azarov said that he hoped his resignation would create “an additional possibility for a political compromise to peacefully resolve the conflict.”
“Today the most important thing is to preserve the unity and integrity of Ukraine,” he said.
A decree issued by Yanukovych confirmed he had accepted the resignation of Azarov and of the entire government. The current cabinet will remain in place as caretakers until a new government is appointed.
The leader of the UDAR (Punch) party, world boxing champion Vitali Klitschko, said Azarov’s move would only partially satisfy the opposition.
“This is not victory but a step to victory,” said Klitschko.
The opposition still wants to oust Yanukovych from power, possibly through early elections which are currently due only in 2015.
Kiev has buzzed with speculation over the last days that the government was planning a state of emergency. But Justice Minister Olena Lukash said yesterday there were currently no plans for this.
Applause broke out in parliament including from opposition benches after the vote to scrap the protest laws, which passed with 361 deputies in favour and two against. The laws had outlawed protest convoys of more than five cars and imposed a ban on opposition activists wearing masks or helmets.
Fatherland Party leader Arseniy Yatsenyuk said: “We have repealed the laws against which the entire country rose up.”
Amid a fast-evolving political situation the streets of Kiev were calm yesterday in contrast to days of clashes last week.
However the barricades built by protesters out of sandbags and which reach several metres high were still in place with the city centre now clearly divided between areas controlled by protesters and those by security forces.
It is not clear who could replace Azarov. Opposition chiefs including Klitschko have rejected joining the government and some analysts yesterday floated the idea that pro-opposition tycoon Petro Poroshenko might step into the seat.
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