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Ukraine Prime Minister Azarov Resigns

Ukraine Prime Minister Azarov Resigns
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Prime Minister Mykola Azarov resigned on Tuesday in a bid to defuse Ukraine's deadly crisis and preserve its unity, finally giving into months of pressure from street protesters.

Ukraine Prime Minister Azarov Resigns

Azarov said he had taken a "personal decision" to resign to preserve Ukraine's unity as parliament opened a session to vote on reforms and concessions backed by President Viktor Yanukovych.
The European Union and United States cranked up pressure on Yanukovych to impose serious reforms to end a standoff that turned parts of Kiev into a war zone patrolled by masked protesters and left three activists dead.

After a four hour meeting with opposition leaders, the presidency said that controversial anti-protest laws passed on January 16 would be canceled and amnesty granted for jailed protesters on conditions public buildings and streets were freed up.
EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton brought forward a visit to Kiev by several days while US Vice President Joe Biden urged Yanukovych to work with the opposition on "immediate measures" to de-escalate the crisis.
The crisis was also due to dominate a summit between the European Union and Russia attended by President Vladimir Putin who will not want the standoff to overshadow the Winter Olympics in Sochi starting February 7.
In a dramatic morning announcement, Azarov yielded to months of pressure from the opposition who have made his resignation a key demand of protests based on 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".
"The government has done everything during this standoff for a peaceful resolution of the conflict," he said, adding that his cabinet had been forced to work in "extreme conditions".
He further said: "Today the most important thing is to preserve the unity and integrity of Ukraine. This is far more important than any personal plans or ambitions. That is why I have taken this decision."

There was no immediate comment from the opposition, with a spokesman for the Fatherland Party, stating they were waiting to confirm that Yanukovych would accept the resignation.
The streets of Kiev were calm on Tuesday 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 center now clearly divided between areas controlled by protesters and those by security forces.
Members of a radical splinter group of the protest overran the justice ministry building on Sunday but vacated it on Monday after an appeal from opposition leaders.

The special parliament session in Kiev is expected to debate ways of ending the crisis, including abolishing draconian anti-protest laws that have angered the opposition.
Despite Azarov's resignation, a key sticking point in the negotiations between the opposition and Yanukovych has been the president's own political future.
The opposition says it wants him out before the end of his term next year and radical protesters are pushing to oust him as soon as possible.
Amid growing international concern on Ukraine,the European Union's foreign policy chief Ashton is due to fly to Kiev after the EU-Russia summit in a flurry of diplomacy to end the deadlock.

Russia has slammed the protesters as extremists, with Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov condemning them as "fascistic youth" and warning against outside interference.
The protests began in November as a drive for EU integration after Yanukovych under Russian pressure ditched a key deal with the bloc that had been years in the making.
Protesters now occupy or are blockading a total of 10 of the 25 regional centers.
Most worryingly for Yanukovych, the protests have spread into his heartland in majority Russian-speaking eastern Ukraine.

Source: News Agencies, Edited by website team


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