The National - News

Tymoshenko free

Yulia Tymoshenko expresses confidence that Ukraine will join the EU as protesters seize president’s house and office on a dramatic day

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The dramatic moment when the Ukrainian opposition leader Yulia Tymoshenko was freed from the hospital where she had been held under prison guard for nearly three years, as the beleaguere­d president Viktor Yanukovich was ousted and fled Kiev and protesters took control of the city centre.

Our homeland will from today on be able to see the sun and sky as a dictatorsh­ip has ended

Yulia Tymoshenko

Opposition leader

KIEV Ukrainian opposition leader Yulia Tymoshenko was freed yesterday during the dramatic ousting of her arch enemy Viktor Yanukovich, setting up a run for the presidency in May.

Earlier in the day, Ukraine’s Parliament voted to remove Mr Yanukovich from power after months of protests against his government’s decision to spurn a deal on closer ties with the European Union in favour of former Soviet master Moscow.

Ms Tymoshenko said she believed Ukraine would follow the will of Ukrainian protesters and join the EU, the Interfax news agency reported.

“I am sure that Ukraine will be a member of the European Union in the near future and this will change everything,” she said in Kiev after being freed from jail in Kharkiv.

Protesters took control of Kiev’s charred city centre and also seized Mr Yanukovich’s lavish residence and offices on Saturday. He denounced the events in the capital as a “coup” that he blamed on “bandits”. Ms Tymoshenko was released from jail yesterday after parliament had on Friday voted to free the former prime minister who had spent more than two years in jail for what supporters say were politicall­y tainted charges.

Sporting her distinctiv­e blonde braid, the 53- year- old was driven out of the hospital in the north-eastern city of Kharkiv where she had spent much of her confinemen­t.

“Our homeland will from today on be able to see the sun and sky as a dictatorsh­ip has ended,” she said. She waved to supporters, who chanted “Yulia, Yulia!” before travelling to Kiev’s Independen­ce Square, scene of nearly three months of protests against Mr Yanukovich.

Seventy-seven people were killed in two days of carnage on and around the square this week.

Regretting the deaths of anti-Yanukovich protesters in gun battles and clashes with police, she said everything must be done so that “each drop of blood was not spilt in vain”.

The EU brokered a peace deal between Mr Yanukovich and his rivals on Friday, calling for an election by year-end, but protesters made clear they wanted the president out immediatel­y.

In a day of high drama, parliament, which was empowered under the EU-brokered deal, voted to remove Mr Yanukovich from office and set an election for May 25.

But Mr Yanukovich vowed to remain in power, even as his political allies abandoned him in droves.

“I have no plans to leave the country and I have no plans to resign. I am the legally elected president and all the internatio­nal intermedia­ries I’ve talked to have given me guarantees of security. We’ll see how those are fulfilled,” Mr Yanukovich said in a TV interview yesterday.

Oleksandr Turchynov, a leading opposition MP, was elected speaker of parliament, which under the constituti­on makes him acting head of state. He told parliament­arians that Mr Yanukovich had tried to board a plane to Russia but was turned back by border officials and had returned to the area near his hometown of Donetsk in Ukraine’s east.

The conflict has deepened tensions between the West and Russia. European officials immediatel­y backed the decisions of the parlia- ment and rejected Mr Yanukovich’s allegation­s of a coup. Moscow has backed Mr Yanukovich and Russian the foreign minister, Sergei Lavrov, denounced the events in Kiev as “a direct threat to the sovereignt­y and constituti­onal order in Ukraine”.

However, the parliament also voted to replace a string of key cabinet officials, including the defence and interior ministers, with opposition members.

The interior ministry said that “it serves only the Ukrainian people and fully shares the desire of citizens for immediate change”. It called for cooperatio­n from all sides to ensure public order. And the defence ministry said it would “in no way be drawn into the political conflict”.

Parliament­ary speaker Volodymyr Rybak, a close ally of Mr Yanukovich, handed in his resignatio­n ahead of the vote by MPs to replace him with Mr Turchynov.

Dozens of legislator­s defected from Mr Yanukovich’s Party of Regions, while a majority of those who remained voted for his removal in the parliament vote, said Serhei Tihipko, a senior party member. “We tried for a long time to reach him today but not a single phone worked, none of his aides, not anyone could be reached,” Mr Tihipko told reporters in the parliament. “Members of the party who were in parliament today felt abandoned.”

“He should have the courage to resign,” Mr Tihipko said, noting that the party would find another can- didate to run in the May elections if Mr Yanukovich lacks support. Meanwhile, Vitali Klichko, the former boxing champion who is one of the most prominent leaders of the opposition, said yesterday’s developmen­ts amounted to “a political knockout” for Mr Yanukovich. Protests against Mr. Yanukovich’s government started in November when he shelved a partnershi­p accord with the European Union in favour of closer ties with Russia, which promised financial assistance to the county. The protests quickly turned into broader antigovern­ment demonstrat­ions after a crackdown on protesters. Dozens of protesters carrying sticks and shields stood protecting government buildings, including parliament and the security service’s offices. Thousands poured into the square to watch proceeding­s in parliament on a large screen and bring flowers and candles to memorials to dead protesters.

Ms Tymoshenko was jailed in 2011 for abuse of office over a gas deal with Russia but her supporters and western leaders regarded her as a political prisoner.

A fiery orator, she shot to fame during the 2004-2005 Orange Revolution that overturned a rigged election won by Mr Yanukovich. She became prime minister, but was forced out after Ms Yanukovich beat her to the presidency in 2010.

 ?? Reuters ??
Reuters
 ?? Sergey Kozlow / EPA ?? Opposition leader Yulia Tymoshenko greets supporters yesterday as she leaves the hospital in Kharkiv where she had been imprisoned.
Sergey Kozlow / EPA Opposition leader Yulia Tymoshenko greets supporters yesterday as she leaves the hospital in Kharkiv where she had been imprisoned.

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