This article is from the source 'nytimes' and was first published or seen on . It last changed over 40 days ago and won't be checked again for changes.
You can find the current article at its original source at http://www.nytimes.com/2014/05/18/world/europe/talks-on-ukraine-crisis-move-to-separatist-region.html
The article has changed 7 times. There is an RSS feed of changes available.
Version 2 | Version 3 |
---|---|
Volatile Area In Ukraine Hosts Session On the Crisis | |
(about 1 hour later) | |
KIEV, Ukraine — Senior Ukrainian officials on Saturday held a second session of national “round-table” talks aimed at resolving the country’s political crisis, but while the negotiations intensified between leaders from eastern Ukraine and those from the pro-Western provisional government in Kiev, they ended without a resolution. | |
The acting prime minister, Arseniy P. Yatsenyuk, and other officials from the provisional government sought to show a commitment to engage in a dialogue — even traveling to the city of Kharkiv in a region that has been besieged by separatist violence. But representatives of the region said the government must halt operations aimed at suppressing the separatists. | |
“This is the only option in my opinion that can save Ukraine from division,” said Valeriy N. Holenko, chairman of Luhansk Regional Council. | |
The talks are aimed at keeping dialogue going, but do not include the separatists. Those attending were acceptable to Kiev because they had not taken up arms, but many believe there should be more autonomy for the east. | |
There were repeated calls for restoring order and security in eastern Ukraine, with local and regional officials saying Kiev should first withdraw its security forces, and Kiev officials saying that separatist militias should lay down their weapons. | |
There were reports of continued scattered violence in the eastern region on Saturday, including an exchange of gunfire near the Russian border after the governor of the self-declared separatist Luhansk People’s Republic was briefly detained by Ukrainian border guards early Saturday morning. Local news services reported that the governor, Valery Bolotov, was freed after the shootout and had returned to a local government building, with no casualties reported during the gunfight. | |
Mr. Bolotov was returning to Ukraine after seeking medical treatment in Russia for injuries sustained in what an official in the Luhansk People’s Republic said was an assassination attempt. | |
There were also reports of shootings at vehicle checkpoints, including one in Luhansk in which the driver of a vehicle was killed. | |
The session began with a plea for comity by former President Leonid M. Kravchuk, who urged participants to respect the rules and focus on the Kiev government’s plan for decentralization, which would give local officials more budget authority. | The session began with a plea for comity by former President Leonid M. Kravchuk, who urged participants to respect the rules and focus on the Kiev government’s plan for decentralization, which would give local officials more budget authority. |
The talks, however, quickly became contentious, with Inna Bohoslovskaya, a member of Parliament, demanding that leaders from eastern Ukraine explain who was financing the separatists, and the eastern leaders, in response, demanding to know who backed the civil uprising in Kiev that led to the ouster of President Viktor F. Yanukovych. The political and business elite in eastern Ukraine had been loyal to Mr. Yanukovych. | |
Some participants representing eastern Ukraine insisted that Mr. Yanukovych had been removed illegally because Parliament did not formally impeach him after he fled to Russia. (Lawmakers had voted overwhelmingly to strip Mr. Yanukovych of power but Ukraine’s Constitution has no provision for such a step.) | Some participants representing eastern Ukraine insisted that Mr. Yanukovych had been removed illegally because Parliament did not formally impeach him after he fled to Russia. (Lawmakers had voted overwhelmingly to strip Mr. Yanukovych of power but Ukraine’s Constitution has no provision for such a step.) |
Mr. Yatsenyuk, the acting prime minister, said officials in Kiev were pushing ahead with a plan to provide more power to the regions, but he and eastern leaders disagree over the details of decentralization.. | |
Mr. Yatsenyuk has said the federalization proposal by Russia and its supporters seemed aimed at dividing the country by empowering regional governors who might be loyal to Moscow. | |
“We had one Yanukovych,” he said sharply on Saturday. “Now they want 27 Yanukovychs.” | |
In the end, despite much debate, there was no resolution, and it was unclear when or where the talks would continue. | |
Wolfgang Ischinger, who was designated to represent the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe at the talks, urged officials to reach a peaceful settlement. | Wolfgang Ischinger, who was designated to represent the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe at the talks, urged officials to reach a peaceful settlement. |