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The following day, 24 January, Ivano-Frankivsk was overtaken in its second day of pressure while its governor escaped;<ref>http://comments.ua/politics/448464-ivanofrankovske-demonstranti.html</ref> meanwhile in Lutsk, 5,000 surrounded the administration building and Volyn Oblast governor Borys Klimchuk resigned, and later, the councilor Volodymyr Voitovych pleaded before the people on his knees before himself resigning as well.<ref>http://www.theinsider.com.ua/politics/52e23c8e89357/</ref><ref name=volyn5k>http://www.volynpost.com/news/26263-volynska-oda-shturm-iakyj-ne-vidbuvsia-fotoreportazh</ref> The administration of Chernivtsi was stormed and occupied, after which governor Mykhailo Papiev resigned.<ref>http://molbuk.ua/chernovtsy_news/68152-prymischennya-cherniveckoyi-oda-v-rukakh-narodnoyi-rady.html</ref> [[Lutsk]] and [[Uzhhorod]]'s administrations were blockaded,<ref name=24blockade>http://espreso.tv/new/2014/01/24/karta_povstaloyi_ukrayiny_infohrafika</ref><ref>http://www.theinsider.com.ua/politics/52e27fd1422af/</ref> in addition to standing blockades in Poltava, Vinnytsia, and Zhytomyr.<ref name=revmap>{{cite news|title=Хроника и карта революционной Украины|url=http://gordonua.com/news/maidan/Hronika-i-karta-revolyucionnoy-Ukrainy-6854.html|newspaper=Gordon UA|date=24 January 2014}}</ref><ref>http://delo.ua/ukraine/v-poltave-i-vinnice-prohodjat-mitingi-pod-zdanijami-oblgosadmini-225352/</ref><ref>http://glavred.info/politika/v-zhitomire-i-uzhgorode-lyudi-vzyali-v-osadu-organy-mestnoy-vlasti-269328.html</ref> The governor of Uzhhorod's ranch burned down,<ref>http://uzhgorod.in/ua/novini/2014/yanvar/ledidu_pidpalili</ref> and protesters dispersed for the evening with intent to reconvene the next day.<ref>http://uzhgorod.in/ua/novini/2014/yanvar/sprotiv_po_zakarpats_ki_nichna_varta_i_zavtra_pid_oda_na_14_00_foto</ref> In responsive measures, [[Dnipropetrovsk]], [[Mykolayiv]], and Zhytomyr were fortified by police.<ref>http://dnepr.comments.ua/news/2014/01/24/174523.html</ref><ref>http://comments.ua/politics/448480-zdanie-zhitomirskoy-oga-zapolnili.html</ref><ref>http://www.kommersant.ua/news/2392318</ref> By 11 p.m., the regional state administration of Sumy was breached and occupied, but officials refused to capitulate.<ref>http://news.bigmir.net/ukraine/788004-Boi-za-obladministracii--Mer-Sum-i-ego-frakcija-v-gorsovete-podderzhali-Majdan--HRONIKA-?</ref> |
The following day, 24 January, Ivano-Frankivsk was overtaken in its second day of pressure while its governor escaped;<ref>http://comments.ua/politics/448464-ivanofrankovske-demonstranti.html</ref> meanwhile in Lutsk, 5,000 surrounded the administration building and Volyn Oblast governor Borys Klimchuk resigned, and later, the councilor Volodymyr Voitovych pleaded before the people on his knees before himself resigning as well.<ref>http://www.theinsider.com.ua/politics/52e23c8e89357/</ref><ref name=volyn5k>http://www.volynpost.com/news/26263-volynska-oda-shturm-iakyj-ne-vidbuvsia-fotoreportazh</ref> The administration of Chernivtsi was stormed and occupied, after which governor Mykhailo Papiev resigned.<ref>http://molbuk.ua/chernovtsy_news/68152-prymischennya-cherniveckoyi-oda-v-rukakh-narodnoyi-rady.html</ref> [[Lutsk]] and [[Uzhhorod]]'s administrations were blockaded,<ref name=24blockade>http://espreso.tv/new/2014/01/24/karta_povstaloyi_ukrayiny_infohrafika</ref><ref>http://www.theinsider.com.ua/politics/52e27fd1422af/</ref> in addition to standing blockades in Poltava, Vinnytsia, and Zhytomyr.<ref name=revmap>{{cite news|title=Хроника и карта революционной Украины|url=http://gordonua.com/news/maidan/Hronika-i-karta-revolyucionnoy-Ukrainy-6854.html|newspaper=Gordon UA|date=24 January 2014}}</ref><ref>http://delo.ua/ukraine/v-poltave-i-vinnice-prohodjat-mitingi-pod-zdanijami-oblgosadmini-225352/</ref><ref>http://glavred.info/politika/v-zhitomire-i-uzhgorode-lyudi-vzyali-v-osadu-organy-mestnoy-vlasti-269328.html</ref> The governor of Uzhhorod's ranch burned down,<ref>http://uzhgorod.in/ua/novini/2014/yanvar/ledidu_pidpalili</ref> and protesters dispersed for the evening with intent to reconvene the next day.<ref>http://uzhgorod.in/ua/novini/2014/yanvar/sprotiv_po_zakarpats_ki_nichna_varta_i_zavtra_pid_oda_na_14_00_foto</ref> In responsive measures, [[Dnipropetrovsk]], [[Mykolayiv]], and Zhytomyr were fortified by police.<ref>http://dnepr.comments.ua/news/2014/01/24/174523.html</ref><ref>http://comments.ua/politics/448480-zdanie-zhitomirskoy-oga-zapolnili.html</ref><ref>http://www.kommersant.ua/news/2392318</ref> By 11 p.m., the regional state administration of Sumy was breached and occupied, but officials refused to capitulate.<ref>http://news.bigmir.net/ukraine/788004-Boi-za-obladministracii--Mer-Sum-i-ego-frakcija-v-gorsovete-podderzhali-Majdan--HRONIKA-?</ref> |
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On 25th January, protesters managed to occupy the Oblast government building in Chernihiv, demanding the resignation of the governor.<ref>http://zn.ua/UKRAINE/v-chernigove-mitinguyuschie-zahvatili-obladministraciyu-137448_.html</ref> |
On 25th January, protesters managed to occupy the Oblast government building in Chernihiv, demanding the resignation of the governor.<ref>http://zn.ua/UKRAINE/v-chernigove-mitinguyuschie-zahvatili-obladministraciyu-137448_.html</ref> Later that day, protesters occupied the chamber of the Oblast parliament in Poltava, forming an impromptu parliament named Nationalna Rada.<ref>http://zn.ua/UKRAINE/v-poltave-mitinguyuschie-zahvatili-sessionnyy-zal-oblsoveta-137457_.html</ref> |
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=====Timeline of occupations===== |
=====Timeline of occupations===== |
Revision as of 16:20, 25 January 2014
Euromaidan | |||
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Date | 21 November 2013[1]–ongoing (11 years and 1 week) | ||
Location | Ukraine, primarily Kiev | ||
Caused by |
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Goals |
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Methods | Demonstrations, Internet activism, civil disobedience, civil resistance, hacktivism,[8] occupation of administrative buildings[nb 1] | ||
Resulted in |
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Parties | |||
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Lead figures | |||
Number | |||
Casualties and losses | |||
The Euromaidan (Template:Lang-uk, literally "Eurosquare")[nb 5] is a wave of ongoing demonstrations and civil unrest in Ukraine, which began on the night of 21 November 2013 with very large public protests demanding closer European integration. The scope of the protests has since evolved, with many calls for the resignation of President Yanukovych and his government.[58] Protesters also have stated they joined because of the dispersal of protesters on 30 November and "a will to change life in Ukraine".[3]
The demonstrations began on the night of 21 November 2013, when spontaneous protests erupted in the capital of Kiev after the Ukrainian government suspended preparations for signing an Association Agreement and Deep and Comprehensive Free Trade Agreement with the European Union.[59] After a few days of demonstrations an increasing number of university students joined the protests.[60]
Despite so far unmet demands to renew Ukraine-EU integration, the Euromaidan has been repeatedly characterized as an event of major political symbolism for the European Union itself, particularly as "the largest ever pro-European rally in history",[61] able to "improve the EU's damaged self-confidence".[62][clarification needed]
The protests are ongoing despite a heavy police presence,[63][64] regular sub-zero temperatures, and snow. Escalating violence in the early morning of 30 November from government forces has caused the level of protests to rise, with 400,000–800,000 protesters demonstrating in Kiev on the weekends of 1 December[28] and 8 December.[65] In the weeks since, protest attendance has fluctuated from 50,000 to 200,000 during organized rallies.[66][67] Violent riots have taken place on December 1 and January 19–21 in response to police brutality and government repressions. Notably, the protests have remained entirely directed at the regime, without a single store-front window broken in Kiev's downtown in two months of protests, contrary to civil unrest in other European nations such as Greece, Spain, Italy, Portugal and France.[68]
In a poll taken on 7 and 8 December, 73% of protesters had committed to continue protesting in Kiev as long as needed until their demands are fulfilled.[3] In a poll taken late December 2013 by the Research & Branding Group 50% of Ukrainians stated they didn't support Euromaidan, while 45% did support it.[69] The biggest support for the protest can be found in Kiev (about 75%) and western Ukraine (more than 80%).[70][71] In another poll conducted by the Kucheriv Democratic Initiatives Fund and Razumkov Center more than 50% of Ukrainians stated they support the Euromaidan protests, while 42% oppose it.[72]
Background
On 30 March 2012 the European Union (EU) and Ukraine initialed an Association Agreement;[73] however, the EU leaders later stated that the agreement would not be ratified unless Ukraine addressed concerns over a "stark deterioration of democracy and the rule of law", including the imprisonment of Yulia Tymoshenko and Yuriy Lutsenko in 2011 and 2012.[74][nb 6] In the months leading up to the protests Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych urged the parliament to adopt laws so that Ukraine would meet the EU's criteria.[76][77] On 25 September 2013 Chairman of the Verkhovna Rada (Ukraine's parliament) Volodymyr Rybak stated that he was sure that his parliament would pass all the laws needed to fit the EU criteria for the Association Agreement since, except for the Communist Party of Ukraine, "The Verkhovna Rada has united around these bills".[citation needed]
Mid-August 2013 Russia changed its customs regulations on imports from Ukraine.[78] Ukrainian Industrial Policy Minister Mykhailo Korolenko stated on 18 December 2013 that because of this Ukraine's exported had dropped by $1.4 billion (or a 10% year-on-year decrease through the first 10 months of the year).[78] The State Statistics Service of Ukraine reported in November 2013 that in comparison with the same months of 2012 industrial production in Ukraine in October 2013 had fallen by 4.9 percent, in September 2013 by 5.6 percent and in August 2013 by 5.4 percent (and that the industrial production in Ukraine in 2012 total had fallen by 1.8 percent).[79]
On 21 November 2013 a Ukrainian government decree suspended preparations for signing of the association agreement.[80][81] The reason given was that the previous months Ukraine had experienced "a drop in industrial production and our relations with CIS countries".[82][nb 7] The government also assured "Ukraine will resume preparing the agreement when the drop in industrial production and our relations with CIS countries are compensated by the European market".[82] According to Ukrainian Prime Minister Mykola Azarov "the extremely harsh conditions" of an IMF loan (presented by the IMF on 20 November 2013), which included big budget cuts and a 40% increase in gas bills, had been the last argument in favor of the Ukrainian government's decision to suspend preparations for signing the Association Agreement.[84][85] On 7 December 2013 the IMF clarified that it was not insisting on a single-stage increase in natural gas tariffs in Ukraine by 40%, but recommended that they be gradually raised to an economically justified level while compensating the poorest segments of the population for the losses from such an increase by strengthening targeted social assistance.[86] The same day IMF Resident Representative in Ukraine Jerome Vacher stated that this particular IMF loan is worth US$4 billion and that it would be linked with "policy, which would remove disproportions and stimulated growth".[87][nb 8]
President Yanukovych did attend the 28–29 November 2013 EU summit in Vilnius (where originally it was planned that the Association Agreement would be signed on 29 November 2013)[76] but the Association Agreement was not signed.[89][90] Both Yanukovych and high level EU officials did signal that they wanted to sign the Association Agreement at a later date.[91][92][93]
Popular opinion in Ukraine about Association Agreement before Euromaidan
Ukrainians have shown preference to extending economic ties with the EU. According to an August 2013 study of a Donetsk company Research & Branding Group[94] 49% of Ukrainians supported signing the Association Agreement, while 31% opposed it and the rest had not decided yet. The strongest support (74%) was in the Western oblasts of Ukraine, following by the Central oblasts (57% supporters), while the support for the Agreement was weaker in the Southern oblasts (38% support vs 45% oppose) and Eastern oblasts (29% support vs 43% oppose). In a GfK poll conducted October 2–15, 2013, 45% of respondents believed Ukraine should sign an Association Agreement with the EU, whereas only 14% favored joining the Customs Union of Belarus, Kazakhstan, and Russia, and 15% preferred non-alignment.[95] Another poll conducted in November by IFAK Ukraine for DW-Trend showed 58% of Ukrainians supporting the country's entry into the European Union.[96] On the other hand a November 2013 poll by Kyiv International Institute of Sociology showed 39% supporting the country's entry into the European Union and 37% supporting Ukraine's accession to the Customs Union of Belarus, Kazakhstan and Russia.[97]
Comparison with the Orange Revolution
The pro-European Union protests are Ukraine's largest since the Orange Revolution of 2004, which saw Yanukovych forced to resign over allegations of voting irregularities. Although comparing the 2013 events in the same East-West vector as 2004, with Ukraine remaining "a key geopolitical prize in eastern Europe" for Russia and the EU, The Moscow Times noted that Yanukovych's government was in a significantly stronger position following his election in 2010.[98] The Financial Times said the 2013 protests were "largely spontaneous, sparked by social media, and have caught Ukraine's political opposition unprepared" compared to their well-organized predecessors.[99] In an interview with opposition leader Yuriy Lutsenko, when asked if whether the current opposition was weaker than it was in 2004 he argued, that it was stronger because the stakes were higher, "I asked each [of the opposition leaders]: "Do you realize that this is not a protest? It is a revolution [...] we have two roads – we go to prison or we win"[100]
Paul Robert Magocsi illustrated the effect of the Orange Revolution on Euromaidan, saying "Was the Orange Revolution a genuine revolution? Yes it was. And we see the effects today. The revolution wasn't a revolution of the streets or a revolution of (political) elections, it was a revolution of the minds of people, in the sense that for the first time in a long time a Ukrainians, and people living in territorial Ukraine saw the opportunity to protest and change their situation. This was a profound change in the character of the population of the former Soviet Union."[101] Lviv-based historian Yaroslav Hrytsak also remarked on the generational shift, "This is a revolution of the generation that we call the contemporaries of Ukraine's independence (who were born around the time of 1991); it is more similar to the Occupy Wall Street protests or those in Istanbul demonstrations (of this year). It's a revolution of young people who are very educated, people who are active in social media, who are mobile and 90 percent of whom have university degrees, but who don't have futures."[63] According to Hrytsak: "Young Ukrainians resemble young Italians, Czech, Poles, or Germans more than they resemble Ukrainians who are 50 and older. This generation has a stronger desire for European integration and fewer regional divides than their seniors".[102] In a Kyiv International Institute of Sociology poll taken in September, joining the European Union was mostly supported by young Ukrainians (49.8% of those aged 18 to 29), higher than the national average of 43.2% support.[103][104] A November 2013 poll by the same institute found the same result with 50.8% aged 18 to 29 wanting to join the European Union while 39.7% was the national average of support.[103] An opinion poll by GfK conducted October 2–15 found that among respondents aged 16–29 with a position on integration, 73% favored signing an Association Agreement with the EU, while only 45% of those over the age of 45 favored Association. The lowest support for European integration was among people with incomplete secondary and higher education.[95]
Protest or revolution?
There is ongoing expert discussion on whether the Euromaidan movement constitutes a revolution, and many protest leaders (such as Oleh Tyahnybok) already use this term frequently when addressing the public. Tyahnybok called in an official 2 December press release for police officers and members of the military to defect to 'the Ukrainian revolution'.[105]
In a Skype interview with media analyst Andrij Holovatyj, Vitaly Portnikov, Council Member of the "Maidan" National Alliance and President and Editor-in-Chief of the Ukrainian television channel TVi, stated "EuroMaidan is a revolution and revolutions can drag on for years" and that "what is happening in Ukraine goes much deeper. It is changing the national fabric of Ukraine."[106]
Select media outlets in the region have dubbed the evolution of the movement, Eurorevolution (Template:Lang-ua).[citation needed] On 10 December President Viktor Yanukovych stated "Calls for a revolution pose a threat to national security".[107] However, due to several facts, such as very low activity of people (approximately 1 per cent of total population in Ukraine is on the Maidan), political meeting cannot be referred to the revolution status.[108]
Timeline of the events
It has been suggested that this section be split out into another article titled Timeline of the Euromaidan. (Discuss) (January 2014) |
21–29 November 2013
Euromaidan started in the night of 21 November 2013 when up to 2,000 protesters gathered at Kiev's Maidan Nezalezhnosti and began to organize themselves with the help of social networks.[109] After he heard of the Ukrainian government decree to suspended preparations for signing of the Association Agreement on 21 November 2013,[80][81] opposition party Batkivshchyna faction leader Arseniy Yatsenyuk called, via Twitter for protests (which he dubbed as #Euromaidan) on Maidan Nezalezhnosti.[110] The blog of Yuri Andreev on Korrespondent.net asked people to gather on Maidan Nezalezhnosti that day at 22:30.[111]
Approximately 2,000 people converged in the evening of 22 November on Maidan Nezalezhnosti (Independence Square) to protest the decision of the Ukrainian government to suspend the process of integration of Ukraine into the European Union.[112] In the following days, the opposition and pro-EU parties led the protests.[113]
A larger rally took place on 24 November, when 100,000 to 200,000[114] people gathered on Kiev's Maidan Nezalezhnosti. The pro-EU demonstrators carrying Ukrainian and EU flags chanted "Ukraine is Europe" and sang the national anthem as they marched toward European Square for the rally.[115] News agencies claimed this to be the largest protest since the Orange Revolution of 2004.[116] After a small group of protesters attempted to storm the Cabinet of Ministers building, police used tear gas to disperse them.[117] According to the General Prosecutor's Office, 200 were injured on the 24th, including both police and students.[118]
On 25 November jailed former Prime Minister Yulia Tymoshenko began a hunger strike in protest of "President Yanukovych's reluctance to sign the Deep and Comprehensive Free Trade Agreement".[119]
A 26 November 2013 statement by Ukrainian Prime Minister Mykola Azarov saying "I affirm with full authority that the negotiating process over the Association Agreement is continuing, and the work on moving our country closer to European standards is not stopping for a single day" did not appease protesters who blockaded the government building during the cabinet session during which Azarov made the above mentioned statement.[120] The same day the city of Kiev installed a heating tent (hot tea and sandwiches were served) at Maidan Nezalezhnosti, where about 2,000 students were rallying.[63] According to Kyiv Post this was part of an "Ukrainian authorities' attempt to portray themselves as allies with the demonstrators who, in many cases, are calling for the government to resign if it doesn't sign an assocation agreement with the European Union this week".[63] The same day it was reported that social media accounts of protesters were being hacked and disreputable messages being posted in place of rally news and commentary.[63]
On 26 and 27 November 2013 Lithuanian Parliament Speaker Loreta Graužinienė and Polish Sejm Member Marcin Święcicki spoke to the protesters at Maidan Nezalezhnosti.[63] Musical acts like Ruslana put on performances for demonstrators on Maidan Nezalezhnosti.[27][63] On 27 November it was reported that the Kharkiv Polytechnical Institute staff allegedly checked class attendance, threatening truant students who attend the pro-EU rallies in Kiev with expulsion. In other universities, administrators have forbidden students from joining pro-EU protests, posting political commentary to social media networks, and wearing Ukraine-EU ribbons.[63] According to Euronews the protesters in Kiev numbered ten thousand people, many of them students.[64]
At noon of 28 November (the eighth day of protests) about 3,000 people gathered on Maidan Nezalezhnosti; no party symbols were reported, only Ukrainian flags and European Union flags.[63] The crowd grew to 4,000 by the evening while it was again entertained by popular Ukrainian artists.[26][63]
On 29 November 2013, it became clear that Ukraine did not sign the Association Agreement at the Eastern Partnership Summit in Vilnius. The number of protesters in Kiev swelled to 10,000.[89][90][121] In Lviv, protesters numbered some 20,000.[121] As in Kiev the Lviv protesters locked hands in a human chain, symbolically linking Ukraine to the European Union (organizers claimed that some 100 people even crossed the Ukrainian-Polish border to extend the chain to the European Union).[121][122] Euronews reported that protesters in Kiev believed the rally should go on and were calling for the second Azarov Government's and President Viktor Yanukovych's resignation.[123]
30 November attack on protesters and 1 December 2013 riots
2–7 December 2013
The day after the riots, peaceful protests continued to take place and occupy Maidan Nezalezhnosti in Kiev, with tens of thousands attending, while thousands blocked the main Cabinet buildings.[124] According to BBC correspondent David Stern "They have set up almost a military camp of sorts, and have erected a very impressive barricade around the perimeter of the demonstration".[125] David M. Herszenhorn of The New York Times described the square as "oddly festive" and added that "Protest leaders, sensing that momentum had turned to their advantage, continued to add infrastructure to their operation, bringing in television monitors and erecting the small tent city".[126] Elsewhere, Lviv, Ternopil and Ivano-Frankivsk announced a general strike in solidarity with the movement.[127] 1,000 Internal Troops (National Guard) were deployed to Kiev around key government buildings by the Interior Ministry. The parliament committee on statehood and self-governance recommended a vote of no-confidence in Prime Minister Mykola Azarov 's government, opening a way for such a vote on 3 December. The Kiev City Council building remained occupied by protesters.[128][nb 9] The people working at Kiev City Council were still being allowed to come in and do their usual jobs.[124][nb 10]
On 3 December the Azarov Government survived the vote of no-confidence with 186 MP's supporting the motion, and all but 1 Party of Regions MP abstaining from the vote; at least 226 votes were needed.[129] However; the Communist Party of Ukraine, that had not supported this vote, stated that on 4 December they would put forward their own no confidence motion, based on the government's management of the economy.[130] If the 186 MP's supporting the 3 December motion support the 4 December no-confidence motion – which they have stated they will – the 4 December motion will pass with over 226 votes.[130] In his speech to parliament[nb 11], Azarov warned protesters occupying the Kiev City State Administration that force could be used to remove them.[132] In the morning of 3 December Euronews described the situation in Kiev as "calm at the moment, however tensions have remained high".[133] Clashes with riot police did occur outside of parliament.[134] In the afternoon, in freezing conditions, several thousand protesters rallied on Maidan Nezalezhnosti were opposition leaders gave passionate speeches.[135] After the speeches, the crowd moved to the Presidential Administration Building.[135] According to the Ministry of Internal Affairs over 10,000 demonstrators rallied on Maidan Nezalezhnosti in the evening of 3 December; it also noted that it had recorded no incidents.[136] Demonstrators started to pitch about 10 army tents (including a campfire) on the square, and about 10 on Khreshchatyk; while Ukrainian performers entertained the demonstrators.[137] Interfax-Ukraine reported that opposition leaders Arseniy Yatsenyuk, Oleh Tyahnybok and Vitali Klitschko met with foreign ambassadors that same evening.[137] The next day they met with German Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle in Kiev (including a walk on Maidan Nezalezhnosti).[138]
On 5 December 2013 the protest continued with several thousand demonstrators continuing to rally on Maidan Nezalezhnosti; an Interfax correspondent reported that "the situation on the square is calm" and that wooden barricades were installed on Instytytska and Horodetskoho Street.[139] An Interfax-Ukraine correspondent reported that police buses blocked several streets leading to the Verkhovna Rada (parliament) and that about 150 "people waving flags of Svoboda and the red-and-black flags of Ukrainian nationalists" were rallying in front of the central entrance to the Budynok Uryadu (the administrative building for the Cabinet of Ministers of Ukraine).[140] Meanwhile, several hundred supporters of the Party of Regions and President Yanukovych pitched a camp (encircled by a metal fence) on the square in Mariinsky park (in front of the main entrance to the Verkhovna Rada).[140] The OSCE security group summit in Kiev advanced as planned.[141]
Viktoria Siumar, a prominent journalist and former head of Institute of Mass Information, reported that Secretary (head) of the National Security and Defense Council of Ukraine, Andriy Klyuyev, met with TV managers on 6 December urging them to limit Euromaidan coverage.[63] This took place concurrent to Prime Minister Azarov's critical statement of the media in the country, in which he stated there was a lack of coverage towards pro-government rallies, a "disproportionate bias in coverage," and that "everywhere is dominated by only one point of view, and it is a distortion of reality, away from democracy."[142][nb 12] The same day the Director of the Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights within the OSCE Janez Lenarčič stated that the government's demand that protesters unblock governmental buildings was "lawful" and "fully consistent with the acceptable restrictions on the freedom of assembly".[145] However, he also stated that the 30 November court ban on demonstrations in central Kiev was "an unqualified ban on demonstrations, in other words on peaceful assemblies, which is disproportionate and in contradiction to Ukraine's OSCE commitments".[146] Jailed former Ukrainian Prime Minister Yulia Tymoshenko ended her hunger strike that she had started on 25 November in protest of "President Yanukovych's reluctance to sign the DCFTA" on 6 December.[119][147] The same day police and a court order blocked a planned protest at President Yanukovych's private residence Mezhyhirya.[148][149][150][151][152]
An unscheduled meeting between President Yanukovych and Russian President Vladimir Putin took place in the south Russian city of Sochi on 6 December 2013.[153] Ukrainian Foreign Affairs Minister Leonid Kozhara stated the cooperative agreements signed in Sochi were primarily in the fields of in space, aircraft construction, and engineering.[154] Prime Minister Mykola Azarov elaborated on the matter, saying the two met to discuss the drafting of a strategic partnership agreement, eliminate disputes over trading and economic issues,[155] and in a separate announcement told journalists that the president would soon visit Moscow on 17 December,[156] where a "major agreement" would be signed.[63] This prompted opposition leader Arseniy Yatsenyuk to issue a stern warning towards Yanukovych, saying "If Yanukovych tries to sign anything with Russia about the Customs Union it will lead to a bigger wave of protests."[153] Later, The Economist's senior editor Edward Lucas, citing his own diplomatic sources, reported on his Twitter that Yanukovych had allegedly signed a pact with Russia which included terms whereby Ukraine would receive $5 billion and a natural gas price reduction in exchange for an agreement to join their Customs Union at a later date.[63][157][158] Upon hearing the news, opposition leaders expressed fury,[156][159][160] and demanded that the alleged documents be made public immediately.[161] The governments of Russia and Ukraine categorically denied any Customs Union talks took place during the meetings,[156][162][163] however, Russian presidential spokesman Dmitry Peskov did confirm (on 7 December) that the two sides discussed financial aid and credit,[164] and were also now "significantly" closer in talks over natural gas prices.[165][nb 13] At the same time, Yatsenyuk claimed to have information that the planned 17 December Ukrainian-Russian strategic partnership agreement would involve Ukraine's joining of the Customs Union, but added that Ukraine's parliament would be unlikely to ratify it.[169] The Ukrainian Foreign Ministry stated on 10 December that "No documents were expected to be signed and, naturally, no documents were signed during the Sochi meeting"; it also informed that a Ukrainian delegation would attend a 13 December CIS Economic Council in Moscow were "Special attention will be given to the aspects of the realization of the treaty of a free trade zone of October 18, 2011".[170]
8–10 December 2013
8 December marked the third Sunday in a row of mass protest in Kiev.[162] Opposition leaders billed the day as the "March of a Million",[171] and all opposition parties claimed the turnout met the 1,000,000 mark.[63][172][173] According to Interfax-Ukraine, initial reports estimated the number "greatly exceed[s] 100,000 people,"[174] which matched police estimates.[175] Associated Press correspondents on the ground and leading world media reported that 500,000 attended.[171][176] A survey of protesters conducted on the 7th and 8th found that 92% of those who came to Kiev from across Ukraine came on their own initiative, and 8% came as part of a political party or civil society organization. In terms of cause, 70% said they came to protest the police brutality of November 30, and 54% to protest in support of the European Union Association Agreement signing. Among their demands, 82% wanted detained protesters freed, 80% wanted the government to resign, and 75% want president Yanukovych to resign and for snap elections.[177]
After the rally, a large group of Ukrainian protesters toppled the statue to Lenin in Kiev.[178] Unlike the previous week, police officers on the scene withdrew without attempting to defend the monument.[179] After the statue was taken down, the group shouted "Yanukovych, you'll be next!", and proceeded to smash the statue with a sledgehammer, decapitate it, and dismantle it for souvenirs;[180][181] in place of the statue was planted a Ukrainian and red-and-black insurgency flag.[179] The Svoboda party took credit for the statue's destruction, with several party MPs, including Ihor Miroshnichenko, joining the crowd and taking part in the act.[181][182]
Protesters traveling from Belarus who were en route to Kiev to support the protests were denied entry into the country at the border crossing near Chernihiv (where protests have been banned by the local police), while other reports saw traffic officers puncturing the tires of a bus carrying Belarusians.[183] The same day, Party of Regions MP Oleh Tsarev requested to the Security Service and Foreign Ministry of Ukraine to deport or/and ban foreign organizers and political consultants, document scans of which he posted (and later removed) on his Facebook account. Among those named in the document notably included Andreas Umland, Stanislav Belkovsky, Taras Kuzio, Gleb Pavlovsky, and former Georgian president Mikheil Saakashvili, among others.[184]
In the early morning of 9 December, some 730 Tiger and Leopard special forces, whose base of operations had previously been blocked by a motorcade of protesters in Vasylkiv (outside Kiev), broke through the cordone with support from Berkut troops to travel into the city.[185][186] The same day three metro stations in the center of the city – Teatralna, Khreschatyk and Maidan Nezalezhnosti were closed, and trains ran through them without stopping, after the Kiev police had received an anonymous bomb threat.[187] Teatralna station was reopened late afternoon after police completed a fruitless search for possible explosives.[187] In the afternoon the BBC reported that Ukrainian police had begun dismantling protest camps in front of government buildings in Kiev.[188] The protesters had been given until Tuesday (10 December) to leave.[188] They were blockaded with cars, barricades and tents.[188] According to the BBC, no clashes had been reported,[188] but its reporter in Kiev, Steve Rosenberg, described the situation as "tense with various rumours circulating" and that priests were urging the police not to use force, while blessing them.[188] Meanwhile Interfax-Ukraine reported about more police movements and removal of protest barricades in Kiev.[189] The Ministry of Internal Affairs issued a statement that "MPs have informed us that spade handles and other objects that could be used to cause bodily injuries have been distributed to the protesters at the opposition's self-defense posts".[190] It also stated no action was being taken on Maidan Nezalezhnosti.[188] Opposition leader (of the Batkivshchyna party) Arseniy Yatsenyuk meanwhile complained about violence against demonstrators and stated "We do not beat policeman, we do not use force, we do not have any weapons and we do not have any special means".[191] Fellow opposition leader Vitaly Klitschko concerted with that.[188] Svoboda leader Oleh Tyahnybok warned that the government was planning to cut off electricity before an attack on the Euromaidan rallies in central Kiev "But we are preparing to use alternative ways to continue the existence of our camp".[192] He also warned that Russian Federal Security Service (FSB) and police had arrived in Ukraine "With the aim of organizing mass disorder."[193]
The website of opposition party Batkivshchyna went offline on 9 December following a police raid on their headquarters.[188] At their office on Turivska Street in Podil, "In the corridor we have people with machine guns, trying to break through into server rooms," said Ostap Semerak, a Batkivshchyna member,[63] and that some troops climbed in through its windows.[194] It was described by witnesses that a special detachment of police in tactical gear destroyed all equipment in the offices, which also housed the newspaper INTV, Evening News and website Censor.Net.ua, who were raided in similar fashion shortly after[195] The server room was described as "a mess",[63] and the offices themselves were ransacked, and security cameras were destroyed.[196] An Associated Press reporter confirmed broken glass and smashed computers in the offices.[194] "The attackers did not introduce themselves or show any warrant," Censor.net editor Yuri Butusov told Reporters Without Borders. "They ordered all our staff to move away from their computers and to not use their mobile phones. Then they confiscated all our equipment. It was a criminal raid designed to eliminate a site that has been carrying information about the 'Euromaidan' movement."[197] A police spokeswoman initially denied police had conducted any operations at the address,[188] however, the Interior Ministry later admitted the attack on the Batkivshchyna office was sanctioned by a court order for "two criminal cases", pertaining to alleged "fraud and abuse of office".[63] The police said they received a tip from a 'group of citizens' that "illegally seized computer equipment worth Hr 350,000" was on the premises, and that officials from the company 'abused their authority'.[63] During the raid, computer equipment, database servers, and documents were confiscated as evidence.[63][197] Shorter after, UDAR evacuated their offices on Horky Street, which in a press release stated was in relation to the raid on Batkivshchyna.[198][199]
On December 10 at 1:00 am, the Ukrainian government cut off the power in the Kiev City State Administration used by protesters as a headquarters. It was reported that protesters feared aggressive measures would be taken.[200] At the same time, 1:00 AM, public servants with their faces hidden and 100 riot police cleared the barricade at the cross section of the Hrushevskoho street and the Kriposnyj provulok in Kiev.[201] MP Andriy Shevchenko announced that police used their batons and kicked protesters.[202] Hours later, 200 police advanced on the barricades on Lyuteranska and Bankova Street, with hundreds of protesters holding their ground, including Wladimir Klitschko.[203] There, provocateurs penetrated into the ranks of the protesters, threatened with sticks, and used tear gas against the police, Hromadske.TV reported.[204] During the clash over the barricaded encampment, there were about 12 to 15 injuries reported, including among police.[205]
EU foreign policy and security High Representative Catherine Ashton held meetings in Ukraine on 10 and 11 December "to support a way out of the political crisis."[188] Accompanied by a small delegation, she met President Yanukovych, governmental officials, opposition figures, and representatives of civil society.[206][207] President Yanukovych also had a roundtable meeting with all three former presidents Leonid Kravchuk, Leonid Kuchma, and Viktor Yushchenko. During the meeting, discussed were the release of Euromaidan detainees, the implementation of future EU-related reforms, and Kuchma alluded to the possible dismissal of Prime Minister Azarov.[208] The opposition and organizers of Euromaidan were not participants in the rountable meeting.[209] During the meeting President Yanukovych stated, "I have said many times that the program of the Party of Regions since 1997 has the strategic aim of Ukraine's integration with Europe" and that he had ordered the government to work on minimizing the economic risks to Ukraine that the signing of the Association Agreement with the EU would entail, by the time of the EU-Ukraine summit scheduled for the spring of 2014.[210] It was also decided "that there will be a bilateral commission, with the European Union on the one side and Ukraine on the other" (with occasional consultations with Russia) to normalize relations between Ukraine and the EU.[211] European Commissioner for Enlargement and European Neighbourhood Policy Štefan Füle responded that the EU was "willing to maintain dialogue with Russia to convince it that an Ukraine–European Union Association Agreement will not harm its economic interests, but it will not hold tripartite negotiations on the matter".[212] He also added that the EU was willing to provide financial aid to Ukraine for implementation of the Association Agreement.[213] During the 10 December talks, President Yanukovych expressed the wish to renegotiate the terms for the signing of the Association Agreement "If the agreement were signed as it is, it would create a lot of difficulties in the farming industry".[214] On 10 December Svoboda leader Oleh Tyahnybok claimed Euromaidan leaders had not been invited to the roundtable meeting (he referred to the talks as "a stage-managed comedy"); the same day former president Kravchuk expressed hope that Euromaidan leaders would attend the meetings on 11 December.[215]
11 December 2013 police clash with protesters
In the early morning of 11 December, thousands of coordinated Internal Troops (VV) and Berkut surrounded the Maidan Nezalezhnosti (square) in order to clear out all remaining protesters, barricades, and encampments from its periphery in what was described as a 'determined and unexpected crackdown on protesters'.[63][216][217] Temperatures fell to -13C (+9F), the coldest night of the winter to date in Kiev.[216] Several police officers confirmed they had been given orders to clear barricades from the boundaries of the square but not remove the tent camp that has sprung up inside the space.[216] City workers used a bulldozer and chainsaws to clear away remaining barricades from the previous night's advance.[217] There were no immediate signs of violence, and no attempt by riot police to take down camps located within the square itself.[218] Many police were trapped behind protester lines during the scuffles but demonstrators allowed them to regroup and in some instances even handed back their shields. Police later pressed forward again.[216] The fiercest battle came on the north side of the square, where hundreds of black-helmeted riot police struggled for several hours against lines of protesters who wore orange hardhats distributed by organizers.[216]
Taxi drivers and subway conductors played a notable role in organizing the rise of protesters, spreading the word of the crackdown and in the case of taxi drivers, offering rides into the center of the city.[63] By 5:13 am, the crowd had swelled to 25,000 from 5,000 hours earlier.[63] The confrontation between protesters and police during the removal of barricades is said to have reenergized the demonstrations. The barricades were rebuilt shortly after the departure of the police[219]
The police stated that the clearing of the Maidan (police referred to it as "territory landscaping work") was carried out at night "to avoid additional noise and inconvenience to traffic and people, since the working week continues".[63][220] Later that morning Ukrainian Interior Minister Vitaliy Zakharchenko stated "I want to calm everyone down: there will be no dispersal of Maidan [the rally at Maidan Nezalezhnosti]. Nobody is infringing upon the people's right to a peaceful protest. However, the rights and legitimate interests of other people cannot be ignored. The capital city's normal functioning cannot be disrupted."[221] His Deputy Minister Viktor Ratushniak stated that afternoon, "If the enforcement service goes to the police and starts carrying out the court's ruling, the police will accordingly be involved. If the enforcement service does not request help from the police, the latter will stay out".[222] Witnesses claimed 8 buses of "Leopard" Interior Troops had left deployment from Vyshhorod to Kiev.[223] In a separate incident, local media reported that a company of 220 Berkut troops based in Kirovohrad refused to accept orders to deploy to Kiev, renouncing the use of force against peaceful protesters.[224] The Interior Ministry denied the reports.[63]
Overnight, activists formed self-defense groups to guard Kiev City Hall.[225] Police attempted to raid the building by mid-morning, which it swarmed with busloads of riot troops; but were held back by fire hoses, firecrackers, and smoke bombs.[219][226][227] The steps to the building were also slicked with ice and cooking oil.[63] By the afternoon, demonstrators on Khreshchatyk, at City Hall, and the Maidan had held off, and then outnumbered police, who then left the area.[226][228]
Clashes during the raid and a standoff at City Hall sent 30 people to seek medical aid and fifteen to hospital, including nine police, officials stated.[217] People hospitalized with frostbitten feet, head injuries, broken ribs, arms and legs, as well as back injuries.[229] The Kyiv Post reported an instance of a Berkut officer blatantly clubbing a man in a Batkivshchyna party jacket as they advanced.[63] Among the injured was Svoboda MP Andriy Illenko, who was seen in photos with his head bloodied and bandaged.[230] Prime Minister Azarov denied that force has been used against demonstrators, calling the event "clearing the roads".[231] 11 demonstrators were arrested during the clashes.[226]
Protest leader Vitali Klitschko referred to the police actions as "senseless and brutal actions by the authorities" that only would help the number of protestors to go up.[220] "This was the most stupid thing the authorities could have done," said Klitschko. "To clear out the square when Catherine Ashton is in town. People here are determined not to live in a police state."[216] The incident also drew immediate criticism from European and American politicians, including Catherine Ashton and John Kerry.
Kiev Passenger Railway Station and Terminal D of Boryspil International Airport were closed for hours and reopened after bomb threats made against them turned out to be hoaxes.[232]
Also on 11 December Ukrainian Prime Minister Azarov stated that there will be no discussion about the Customs Union of Belarus, Kazakhstan, and Russia at a next round of negotiations with Russia: "There will be no discussion of the Customs Union and the government is not drafting any documents. I want to stop the rumors right away".[233] He also requested EUR€20 billion from the European Union "to provide conditions to minimize losses for the Ukrainian economy" in connection with signing the Ukraine–European Union Association Agreement; adding "The government also favors the soonest possible signing of that agreement".[234] European Commission spokesman Olivier Bailly responded (the same day) "We consider that Ukrainian prosperity and Ukrainian future cannot be subjected to a call of tender where the highest bidder will get the price".[235] Former president Viktor Yushchenko weighed in on the economics of Ukrainian-European integration, estimating that adopting European standards should actually cost US$400 million.[236]
Talks with between President Yanukovych and the EU's Catherine Ashton and US Assistant Secretary of State Victoria Nuland continued.[235] After their meeting, Ashton stated that President Yanukovych had promised her he would take steps to resolve the crisis in Ukraine within 24 hours.[237] Meanwhile Euromaidan's Denys Shevchuk left the roundtable meeting with former presidents Kravchuk, Kuchma, and Yushchenko, claiming, "This is just a fiction".[238]
By the evening, thousands of protesters worked in large groups to shovel snow into sandbags and rebuild barricades, supported by metal railings and other debris.[219] And President Yanukovych released an address to Ukrainians: "I invite representatives of all the political forces, priests, members of the public to a nationwide dialogue. I'm ready to participate in such a round table".[239][nb 14] The address also stated the government would act "solely within the law and will never use force against peaceful assemblies".[239] But opposition leader Arseniy Yatsenyuk responded there could only be talks once their demands had been met; and according to Vitali Klitschko, the police actions of the night before had "closed off the path to compromise".[240] Klitschko added the next day that if talks (for him this was only possible after the protesters demands had been met) would be held they "should take place with the participation of European representatives and members of civil society".[58]
12–16 December 2013
On 12 December, it was reported that in addition to barricades being rebuilt, there was no longer any room for tents to be set up on Maidan.[241]
Chief of the Security Service of Ukraine (SBU) Oleksandr Yakymenko invited experts from the Russian Federal Security Service (FSB) to advise in how to disperse of the protests; said Batkivshchyna MP Hennadiy Moskal, who acted as Deputy Chairman of the SBU in 2007. Citing sources within the SBU, he said that recommended was the use of debilitating gases and aerosols.[242] Later, Russian liberal-democratic politician Boris Nemtsov was barred entry into the country by border services.[243] Over 10,000 remained in Maidan overnight.[244]
A roundtable discussion was held on 13 December involving the president, three leaders of the opposition, representatives of the government, parliament, clergy and civil society.[245] There was no live broadcast on any national channel, and the live stream of two TV channels was disrupted when opposition leaders spoke. Following the roundtable, former president Kravchuk blasted the blackout of the broadcast, saying "I organized the roundtable. It is outrageous that they turned it off. It is outrageous when the left hand doesn’t know what the right hand is doing."[246] Controversially, it was uncovered that Dmytro Levin, who claimed to represent a student organization involved in Euromaidan, is actually a member of Young Regions, the youth wing of the pro-presidential Party of Regions.[245] The real student leaders of Euromaidan said they were not invited to take part in the discussion, and Levin's statements (which included claims of being "used" by opposition politicians) were said to be uncharacteristic for the real leaders of the student strikes, such as stopping repressions against students and dismissal of Education Minister Dmytro Tabachnyk.[245] During the roundtable President Yanukovych proposed an amnesty for detained demonstrators.[247] After the talks Klitschko stated "Not a single step was made to meet the opposition, I have the impression that the authorities today did not listen to a single one of the demands of the opposition".[247] A Ukrainian court did free nine people arrested on 30 November on 13 December.[247] Also that day, and after his delegation had talked to European Commissioner Štefan Füle, First Deputy Prime Minister Serhiy Arbuzov stated Ukraine will "soon sign" an agreement on closer ties with the European Union (during an interview with Euronews).[248] However, in relation to this Prime Minister Azarov defended the decision to hold off on signing the Association Agreement, saying had Ukraine "signed an association agreement with the European Union at current conditions, this would have inevitably led to its economy's collapse".[249] The previous day, Azarov suggested postponing the deadline for the entry into force of certain provisions of the agreement on a free trade area with the EU,[250] which EU officials rejected.[251]
On 14 December President Yanukovych suspended the Head of Kiev City Administration Oleksandr Popov, Deputy Secretary of the National Security and Defense Council of Ukraine Volodymyr Sivkovych.[252] Later the same day the General Prosecutor of Ukraine's Office handed "a notification on suspicion of abuse of power when ordering the police actions of 30 November 2013" out to Sivkovych and Popov; and to former Head of Kiev police Valeriy Koriak and his Deputy Head Petro Fedchuk.[252] According to Prosecutor General of Ukraine Viktor Pshonka "All four officials will soon be placed under home arrest".[252] The previous day opposition leader Yatsenyuk had stated during the roundtable discussion "Those who made illegal orders, and those who executed them, must be held to account, for the whole country to see. Those who have been arrested as activists of the Maidan must be released – That is all".[253] Meanwhile on Maidan, popular Ukrainian rock band Okean Elzy performed to "possibly hundreds of thousands of Ukrainians,"[254] and estimates for the day placed over 200,000 in Kiev to support the movement.[255]
The size of the protest held at 200,000 the following day, according to Interfax.[256] U.S. senators Christopher Murphy and John McCain addressed the crowds. EU Enlargement Commissioner Štefan Füle said the EU is stopping talks on the Association Agreement because of the Yanukovych administration's unreasonable demands, of which Ukrainian authorities have sought $27 billion in aid to sign.[256] In a tweet issued by Füle, he said there was a divergence between the words and deeds of the president and government regarding the Association agreement, and that "their arguments have no grounds in reality."[257]
17 December 2013 Ukrainian–Russian action plan
Russian President Vladimir Putin and his Ukrainian counterpart Viktor Yanukovych held the sixth "interstate consultation" on 17 December in Moscow,[258][259] where they signed the 17 December 2013 Ukrainian–Russian action plan.[259] This consisted of the Russian National Wealth Fund buying $15 billion of Ukrainian Eurobonds and the cost of Russian natural gas supplied to Ukraine lowered to $268 per 1,000 cubic metres (this price was $400).[260][261] As part of the action plan Russia committed itself to the restoration its customs regulations on imports from Ukraine that had existed before mid-August 2013.[78] According to President Putin and Russian presidential press secretary Dmitry Peskov this deal was "not tied to any conditions" and Ukraine's possible accession to the Customs Union of Belarus, Kazakhstan, and Russia was not addressed.[262][263] Peskov also added "it is our principled position not to interfere in Ukraine's affairs" and accused other countries of doing the opposite.[262] According to President Yanukovych the trade situation between Russia and Ukraine required urgent intervention, and that it should be coordinated with other Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS) countries.[264] He also added referring to Russia–Ukraine relations, "We'll have to learn lessons for the future and not to repeat such mistakes".[265] And President Yanukovych also stated that Ukraine and Russia should strengthen cross-border and inter-regional cooperation "which create convenient conditions for the people".[266]
In response to the agreement, the opposition parties blocked parliament in order to defer its ratification since they quickly denounced the plan.[267][268] And approximately 50,000 continued their protest on Maidan Nezalezhnosti.[269] Where opposition leader Vitaly Klitschko told the crowd “He [President Yanukovich] has given up Ukraine’s national interests, given up independence and prospects for a better life for every Ukrainian”.[270] The opposition leaders vowed to continue their protests, if necessary through New Year and Orthodox Christmas (celebrated on 7 January annually), they repeated their demands for the firing of the second Azarov Government, early presidential and parliamentary elections.[268]
Also on 17 December, UDAR issued a statement regarding an alleged attempt on leader Vitali Klitschko's life. According to the party in a statement to western diplomats, when Klitschko's private jet was attempting landing at Boryspol airport on 24 November, the plane was denied landing at an altitude of 100m, and a visual clearance of 50m. They allege this was an attempt to repeat an accident similar to the 2010 Polish Air Force Tu-154 crash.[271][272]
18–31 December 2013
On 18 December Prime Minister Mykola Azarov stated that without the deal with Russia "bankruptcy and social collapse would have awaited Ukraine".[273] He also added that there was no way Ukraine could have signed the EU Association Agreement as Ukraine would have had to accept unfeasibly stringent IMF conditions for economic reform.[273] The protest on Maidan Nezalezhnosti continued on 18 December 2013.[274]
On 19 December President Viktor Yanukovych stated "We have decided to pause [on the Association Agreement] to work out on what kind of conditions should be in place for us to sign the Free Trade Zone Agreement [a part of the Association Agreement]. And this answer should be found by the government. There isn’t any contradiction about Ukraine’s course on the [EU] integration issue. Generally, this is not about the integration, this is about economical relations".[275] Although he added "If we talk about the work on the free trade agreement [a part of the EU Association Agreement], this will take us some time, and we still have a lot of uncertainties. Surely, we should see how this will benefit us in the short term, midterm, and long term".[276] He also added that Ukraine may combine the EU Association Agreement with observer status in the Customs Union of Belarus, Kazakhstan, and Russia and the Eurasian Economic Union.[277] And that Ukraine expects to be granted observer status in the Eurasian Economic Union, "As concerns the Eurasian Union, we filed a written bid in Astana in August this year to consider Ukraine's participation in the Eurasian Union as an observer".[278] The same day Polish Foreign Minister Radosław Sikorski stated "I do not know any formal facts that should say that it is impossible to sign the association agreement between Ukraine and the European Union".[279] Meanwhile Russian President Vladimir Putin commented on the 17 December deal between Russia and Ukraine (which he described as an "act of brotherly love"): "This is not at all linked to (protests at) Maidan, nor with the EU-talks that Ukraine leads… We're just seeing that Ukraine is in dire straits and we should support her".[280]
On 20 December high-ranking EU-officials stated that the EU is still ready to sign the Association Agreement "as soon as Ukraine is ready for it", that this agreement was also beneficial for Russia and that the EU "is totally not concerned about the fact that Ukraine is signing agreements with Russia".[281][282][283][284][285] On 20 December 2013 Prosvita building in Kharkiv was thrashed by unknown.[286]
On 21 December, Volodymyr Maralov, a member of the activist anti-corruption group Road Control was shot and his car burned at approximately 11 p.m. on Shevchenko Square in Kiev while being attacked by two men and one accomplice. According to the surgeon who removed the bullet, it was within 6 inches of his heart.[287] The group claims the attack was part of an ongoing effort by officials to stop the organization's reporting on police corruption. The assailants allegedly demanded Maralov expose the whereabouts of a group member who received political asylum in the United States in November, and for the location of incriminating data. Earlier this month, Road Control journalist Andriy Dzyndzya and his lawyer Viktor Smaliy were remanded into custody for two months; Dzyndzya is accused of stealing keys to a front-end loader that was used on the 1 December riots, his lawyer is accused of attacking a judge.[288]
On 22 December, the fifth ongoing week of the protests, 100,000 rallied in Kiev.[66] During this day major opposition parties and non-partisans established a nationwide political movement called Maidan People's Union.[289][290] And Klitschko told the crowds "We won't leave this place in any case. I'm inviting you to stand and celebrate the New Year here, on the Maidan".[291]
On 23 December 2013 Russian presidential aide Yuri Ushakov stated "there is no contradiction" in Ukraine's association with the EU and their observer status in the Customs Union of Belarus, Kazakhstan, and Russia and the Eurasian Economic Union.[292]
On 24 December 2013 an armed assault was conducted in downtown of Kharkiv on co-organizer of protest in Kharkiv Dmytro Pylypets. He received 12 stab wounds.[293][294]
In the early morning of 25 December Tetiana Chornovol, a well known Ukrayinska Pravda journalist, Euromaidan social-activist, and Batkivshchyna party member was brutally assaulted near Boryspil International Airport.[citation needed][nb 15] Euromaidan activists called for a picketing of the Ministry of Internal Affairs at 8 am, in which hundreds attended, calling for Minister of Internal Affairs Vitaliy Zakharchenko's resignation.[296][297][298] Chornovil was hospitalized with a broken nose, a concussion and multiple bruises.[298] Opposition parties accused the authorities of being behind the attacks, while a statement from Olena Bondarenko of the Party of Regions categorized the attack as spontaneous violence caused by Euromaidan, and blamed the opposition.[299]
On 27 December a law (drafted by the second Azarov Government) introduced criminal liability for the seizure of buildings "which leads to the disruption of their normal operation" in the Criminal Code of Ukraine.[300]
On 29 December, re-energised by the 25 December attack on Chornovol, tens of thousands gathered again in Kiev.[301][302] About 200 cars packed with protesters joined by over a thousand protesters marched on President Yanukovych's Mezhyhirya residence 10 kilometres outside Kiev's outskirts.[70][301][302]
1–15 January 2014
On New Year's Eve, 200,000 attended Euromaidan to jointly celebrate.[303] On 1 January, 15,000 held a torchlight march through Kiev in support of the 105th birthday of Stepan Bandera,[304] a controversial World War II-era nationalist.[305]
On 3 January, after being questioned by police,[306] a Svoboda's MP Andriy Illenko and his lawyer Sydir Kizin were attacked and brutally beaten outside of a police station in Kiev. Both received extensive injuries. According to Svoboda, Illyenko was primarily diagnosed with a broken jaw and treated for a concussion; according to police, a broken nose.[307][308] The attack occurred after the members of Svoboda came out of the Shevchenkivskyy's police station. The party called the attack an 'attempted murder'.[309]
According to Batkivschyna MP Arsen Avakov (on 9 January 2014) recently the protesters in Kiev had experienced regular power cuts; to prevent this oppositions MPs did have five meetings with Kiev city authorities and electricity suppliers and installed back-up generators.[310] According to Avakov there had been no difficulties with taking rubbish out of Maidan Nezalezhnosti and taking wood into the square.[310]
On 10 January, Berkut riot police clashed with protesters near Kiev-Sviatoshyn Raion district court in Sviatoshyn neighborhood of Kiev, where guilty verdicts against the so-called "Vasylkiv terrorists" were announced. The Patriots of Ukraine group members were given 6 year sentences for 'trying to blow up a non-existent Vladimir Lenin statue' (a local city council already dismantled the Lenin monument before the alleged plot was discovered); critics called the court proceedings a sham. After the court verdict was announced, protesters (more than 100) decided to block the prisoner transport bus, after which hundreds of riot police were dispatched, who used tear gas and batons. More than a dozen people got injured, some of them seriously, with reports of multiple broken hands and legs, as well as head injuries. Opposition leader Yuri Lutsenko was among the injured, photographed with bloody head wounds and knocked unconscious before being taken to a hospital for intensive care. A witness account stated that police targeted Lutsenko, dragging him into a bus where he was beaten. Three members of the Svoboda Party were also injured; as well as two photojournalists, whose camera equipment was broken by police.[311][312] European Union and American officials condemned the attack, with US Ambassador to Ukraine Geoffrey Pyatt saying “Lutsenko will be remembered as hero of EuroMaidan” for trying to intervene in the confrontation between police and protesters.[313] The three opposition party leaders (Klitschko, Yatseniuk, and Tyahnybok) issued a joint statement condemning the assault, categorizing it as attempted murder.[314]
On 12 January, the protests numbered 10,000–50,000 people were held on Maidan Nezalezhnosti.[67][315]
On 15 January, courts banned protests and public assembly in Kiev once again.[316] This led the opposition to believe that the following night ("and the next ones") Maidan Nezalezhnosti would be cleared by Berkut special police units.[316][317]
16 January 2014 anti-protest laws
On 16 January the MPs from Party of Regions and Communist Party of Ukraine (and a number of independent MPs)[318] in the Ukrainian parliament passed anti-protest laws (the texts of some of them became available after MPs had voted for them[319]) which criminalized all of the Euromaidan opposition's methods employed during protests.[320] The laws introduced 10-year jail terms for blockading government buildings; hefty fines and prison terms for protesters who wear face masks and helmets; fines and prison terms for unauthorised installation of and provision of facilities or equipment for tents, stages or amplifiers in public places; and driving bans for people who form convoys of more than five cars.[321] Also approved was legislation to easier strip members of parliament of immunity[nb 16]; the identification of members of non-government organisations funded by foreign governments or foundations as "foreign agents"; 2-year jail terms for defamation spread through social media; 1-year jail terms of corrective labour for slandering government officials;[318] mandatory registration for internet-based media and prepaid mobile phone services purchasers.[321] According to The Financial Times, the 11 new laws were approved while opposition lawmakers were occupying the main session hall and voted in by MPs by means of show of hands that "were too rapid to actually be counted,[321] and in some cases done in five seconds.[320] The opposition dubbed the day in parliament 'Black Thursday' and stated that, "Today Ukrainian parliamentarianism is dead", and that the laws have ensured "dictatorship where there is no right to assemble, to reason, to live, where there is no law, no civil rights, and no legal process".[323] The Party of Regions faction noted that the opposition had prevented normal voting since members of opposition factions had taken away voting cards from their colleagues in parliament.[319] Party of the Regions MP Oleh Tsariov stated the laws were aimed to prevent further escalation of the ongoing political crisis.[318] The OSCE called on President Yanukovych to veto the legislation "which might be arbitrarily interpreted and lead to disproportionate restrictions on media freedom, stifling debate and critical views".[324][nb 17] In reaction on the 16 January votes EU Commissioner for Enlargement and European Neighbourhood Policy Štefan Füle stated he was "deeply disappointing to see such a turn from the European path of Ukraine" and he believed the laws were aimed at limiting partnership with the civil society.[319] EU High Representative for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy Catherine Ashton criticism (among others) was "The changes that seem to seriously curtail the activities of civil society organizations in Ukraine and simplify procedures for revocation of mandates of members of parliament are equally worrying".[327] And she added "I call on the President of Ukraine to ensure that these decisions are revised and brought in line with Ukraine's international commitments".[327] German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier reaction on the laws was "The limitation of civil rights will lead Ukraine only further away from Europe".[328] And the United States Department of State expressed deep concern ""Both the process and the substance of the Rada’s actions today cast serious doubt on Ukraine’s commitment to democratic norms".[329] In response to foreign criticism Ukrainian Foreign Minister Leonid Kozhara urged foreign diplomats "to avoid making unilateral statements and remarks that do not reflect the real state of affairs".[330] He also noted that the laws adopted by the Ukrainian parliament on 16 January already exist in the laws of most European countries and meet generally accepted democratic standards and international practices.[330]
The following day, president Yanukovych signed the bills into law and dismissed Hennadiy Vorobiev as commander of the Ukrainian Ground Forces.[331][332][333] Presidential chief of staff Serhiy Lyovochkin resigned from his post in protest of the laws,[334] as well as presidential spokeswoman Daria Chepak.[335] In accordance with enforcing the new anti-social laws, Interior Minister Zakharchenko pledged that "each offence will be met by our side harshly."[336]
19 January 2014–present
On 19 January, Sunday mass protest, the ninth in a row, took place gathering up to 200,000 in central Kiev to protest the new anti-protest laws, dubbed the "Dictatorship laws".[337][338] The rally was attended by opposition leaders, but was also the first public appearance of Tetiana Chornovol since her alleged attack by the authorities.[337] Many protesters defied the face concealment ban by donning party masks, while others wore hard hats and gas masks.[337] AutoMaidan leader Dmytro Bulatov demanded a single oppositional candidate be named, and the crowd also chanted against leaders to comply with this action.[337] Batkivshchyna leaders Arseniy Yatsenyuk and Oleksandr Turchynov declared that a new, alternative parliament would be created.[337]
Euromaidan activists, including former Ukrainian Navy chief, Rear Admiral Ihor Tenyukh,[339] appealed to the military for its "solemn allegiance to the Ukrainian people" rather than the "criminal regime", and for members of the military and police to not carry out criminal orders, namely in the use of force against civilians; they assured those who would be fired for refusing orders of violence would be reinstated once a new government for Ukraine is installed.[337]
Clashes erupted as thousands descended upon parliament via Hrusehvskoho Street, and were met by police cordons, and a blockade of military cars, mini-vans and buses.[337][339] The protests escalated into riots and clashes with police erupted. The riots on Hrushevskoho Street have been ongoing from 19–21 January and have involved both Euromaidan activists and opposition leadership.
Between 21–22 January, 3 were killed during the Hrushevskoho Street riots. On 21 January, the first death occurred after a 22-year old man fell from atop the 13 metre high colonnade in front of Dynamo Stadium while confronted by Berkut police, and suffered fractures to his spine's cervical vertebrae. Reports of the incident debate on whether the man jumped from the building to flee the beating, fell, or if he was pushed by police.[340][341] The second death occurred at 6 a.m. on 22 January, where police shot and killed a protester climbing the barricades in the conflict zone. It was reported he received 4 gunshot wounds, including to the head, and died immediately on the scene before being taken to hospital.[342][343][344] The third, a Belarusian man, was also shot dead by police. Clashes spread to Lutheran Street near the Presidential Administration, with protesters lobbing molotov cocktails.[345]
Danger arose when it appeared that activists who sought treatment at hospitals were 'disappearing'.[345] Prominent Euromaidan activists Ihor Lutsenko and Yuriy Verbytsky were abducted by five unknown men on 21 January at 4 a.m. from Oleksandrivska Hospital in Kiev.[346] Lutsenko was found beaten in the woods the next day, but Verbytsky was murdered; his body found on 22 January.
In response to the escalating violence, police were permitted by the government to increase measures in stopping the riots and protests. Police were now able to block roads to restrict access to the city, and allowed the use of water cannons against rioters regardless of air temperature, which was -10 C at the time of the announcement.[347][348] Despite this, some 50,000 came to Euromaidan to show support.[349] Tanks were reported to be traveling via rail from Chernihiv to Kiev, but government sources claimed they were headed instead to Odessa.[350] Police also illegally published the names and addresses of all known Automaidan activists.[citation needed]
On 22 January the president presented a number of medals to various figures in the police forces and military for their service in the conflict. Controversially, President Yanukovych attempted to present Ukrainian Orthodox Church Patriarch Filaret with an award, which was refused.[351]
Opposition leaders presented the president with a 24-hour window to give in to demands. Vitali Klitschko warned the government that protesters would "go on the attack" if their demands were not met by the next day,[352] while Yatseniuk stated, "Tomorrow we go forward together. If a bullet in the forehead, then bullet in the forehead."[353] Following this sentiment, the UNA-UNSO called on all gun-owning Ukrainians to arm themselves to defend the Maidan.[354]
On 22 January suddenly at least three tanks were deployed from Chernihiv.[355] Officially the tanks were being transferred to the Odessa Oblast and not be going to Kiev.[355] On 23 January it was announced that due to the complicated situation in the country all tanks were returned to their place of permanent base.[356]
Two dozen men in masks armed with batons stormed the TV Kyiv station at 7:00 p.m.[357] Later, several thousand protestors from the anti-Euromaidan group "Kievans for a Clean City" surrounded the U.S. Embassy in Kyiv. Crowd leader Ivan Protsenko blamed American financing and interference for the events in Kiev, and picketers then egged the embassy.[358][359] Later, a number of attendees engaged in an altercation with promoters after they were not paid for their time and participation in the picket.[360]
In the early morning of 23 January, police raided and destroyed a Red Cross Euromaidan medical center.[361] Carrying on from the previous night, it was reported by activist groups that television blackouts were taking place across the country to channels which carried Euromaidan coverage, and internet and social media blocks were also under way.[361] Riot police from Vinnytsia refused their orders to be deployed to Kiev after reports from activists indicated that police and military were being mobilized nation-wide.[361] Automaidan activists were attacked and beaten in Mariinsky Park, and detained by police; 9-10 vehicles had their windows smashed or tired blown. Ruslana called the attack "a carefully planned ambush."[361]
At interview to BBC (Davos, Switzerland), the Prime Minister of Ukraine Mykola Azarov assured that Berkut was not able to use fire arms.[362] Yet, there are several photos of Berkut servicemen who use molotov cocktail[363] and rocks,[364] the use of which are not authorized. Police also brought a water cannon, while outside temperatures were below freezing.
Euromaidan activists documented police brutality on multiple occasions from Berkut and servicemen of the Internal Troops of Ukraine, wherein officers assaulted activists and even random people and would humiliate them using excessive foul language, and force them to undress naked.[365][366] In a video leaked to YouTube, Interior Ministry troops tortured and humiliated a Euromaidan activist in Kiev's Pechersk region; where he was stripped naked in the cold after being beaten, and photographed by officers.[361][367] The video was in close proximity, leaked by an officer in an apparent sign of self-evident barbarism and hatred within police ranks.[368] BBC News interviewed another protester who was photographing the Hrushevskoho Street riots, and then beaten and stabbed by police.[369]
On 23 January reports surfaced that riot police were engaging in the use of improvised grenades, taping nails and other shrapnel to conventional stun grenades.[370]
On January 23, 2014 Berkut grabbed a 22 year old volunteer of Euromaidan medical service (native of Donetsk), confiscated all her identification documents, took her out of the city and left her out in a woodline near Vyshhorod.[371]
On 23 January it was reported that, according to the wife of an active Berkut officer, troops were being ordered to evacuate their families from the city.[372] FC Dynamo Kyiv updated their Facebook page with a red-and-black tryzub as a sign of support for the revolution.[373] FC Shakhtar Donetsk fans then also threw their support behind the Euromaidan movement.[361]
On 23 January 2014 soldiers of the Internal Troops of Ukraine (VV) were awarded with medals bearing the title "National honor to military law enforcement servicemen",[374] a medal that is in fact not in the official list of state awards.[374] Awards were given out to military units of the Eastern Territorial Command (STK) #3057 (Mariupol) and #3037 (Donetsk).[374]
On 24 January President Yanukovych stated (at a meeting with religious leaders) that the dubbed "Dictatorship laws" would be amended, saying that "we will prepare and compromise solutions together with the opposition. We will vote for amending these laws and so will settle all issues".[375] At the same meeting he also stated that "we will continue a dialogue with the opposition leaders" and "I will be doing all I can to stop this conflict and stop violence. "If we can do this on a good note, let's leave it on a good note, and if we can't, we'll use all legitimate methods".[376] Also on 24 January Interior Minister Vitaliy Zakharchenko guaranteed "that the police will not take forceful action to clear Maidan Nezalezhnosti".[377]
On 25 January 2014 at 00:40 (EET) the Ministry of Internal Affairs (MVS) accused the security of Euromaidan in assault on three police officers.[378] In its press-release, the MVS claims that the so-called Maidan security attacked three officers who were on duty.[378] One of them was immediately struck with a knife.[378] The detained servicemen were held in the city hall.[378] Now the wounded one has been freed and hospitalized, while the fate of the other two is unknown.[378] MVS claimed that a policemen who was walking home in civilian clothing was killed by a shot in his head.[379] The same day Interior Minister Vitaliy Zakharchenko claimed "According to information received by law enforces, firearms being piled up at House of Trade Unions and Kyiv City State Administration" and "The opposition leaders don't want to disassociate themselves from radical forces, but are no longer capable of controlling them, exposing Ukrainians to danger".[380] The opposition denied that its activists had captured policemen and called the Interior Ministry's statement provocative.[379]
Rallies
Protests across Ukraine
City | Peak Attendees | Date | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|
Kiev | 400,000–800,000 | 1 Dec | [28][381] |
Lviv | 50,000 | 1 Dec | [30] |
Cherkasy | 20,000 | 23 Jan | [361] |
Ternopil | 10,000+ | 8 Dec | [382] |
Lutsk | 8,000 | 1 Dec | [383] |
Dnipropetrovsk | 5,000–7,000 | 8 Dec | [63][384] |
Ivano-Frankivsk | 5,000+ | 8 Dec | [385] |
Kharkiv | 5,000 | 1 Dec | [386] |
Poltava | 5,000 | 24 Jan | [387] |
Sumy | 5,000 | 1 Dec, 23 Jan | [388][389] |
Zaporizhia | 5,000 | 8 Dec | [390] |
Chernivtsi | 4,000–5,000 | 1 Dec | [383] |
Rivne | 3,000–5,000 | 2 Dec | [391] |
Mukacheve | 3,000 | 24 Nov | [392] |
Bila Tserkva | 2,000+ | 24 Jan | [393] |
Sambir | 2,000+ | 1 Dec | [394] |
Khmelnytskyi | 2,000 | 8 Dec | [385] |
Vinnytsia | 2,000 | 8 Dec, 22 Jan | [395] |
Zhytomyr | 2,000 | 23 Jan | [396] |
Kirovohrad | 1,000 | 8 Dec, 24 Jan | [397][387] |
Kryvyi Rih | 1,000 | 1 Dec | [398] |
Luhansk | 1,000 | 8 Dec | [399] |
Uzhhorod | 1,000 | 24 Jan | [400] |
Odessa | 500–1,000 | 8 Dec | [390][395][401] |
Drohobych | 500–800 | 25 Nov | [402] |
Kherson | 600+ | 8 Dec | [403] |
Simferopol | 500+ | 8 Dec | [390] |
Mykolaiv | 500 | 24 Jan | [404] |
Donetsk | 300 | 1 Dec | [405] |
Mariupol | 200 | 7 Dec | [406] |
Chernihiv | 150–200 | 22 Nov | [407] |
Vasylkiv | 70 | 4 Dec | [408] |
A 24 November protest in Ivano-Frankivsk saw several thousand protestors gather at the regional administration building.[409] No classes were held in the universities of western Ukrainian cities such as Lviv, Ivano-Frankivsk and Uzhhorod.[410] Protests also took place in other large Ukrainian cities:Kharkiv, Donetsk,Dnipropetrovsk, Luhansk, Lviv, and Uzhhorod. The rally in Lviv in support of the integration of Ukraine into the EU was initiated by the students of local universities. This rally saw 25–30 thousand protesters gather on Prospect Svobody (Freedom Avenue) in Lviv. The organizers planned to continue this rally 'till the 3rd Eastern Partnership summit in Vilnius, Lithuania, on 28–29 November 2013.[411] A rally in Simferopol, which drew around 300, saw nationalists and Crimean Tatars unite to support European integration; the protesters sang both the Ukrainian national anthem and the anthem of the Ukrainian Sich Riflemen.[412]
7 people were injured after 40 titushky (thugs) attacked a tent encampment in Dnipropetrovsk, which was ordered cleared by court order on 25 November.[413][414] Officials estimated the number of attackers to be 10-15,[415] and police did not intervene in the attacks.[416] Similarly, police in Odessa ignored calls to stop the demolition of Euromaidan camps in the city by a group of 30, and instead removed all parties from the premises.[417] 50 police officers and men in plain clothes also drove out a Euromaidan protest in Chernihiv the same day.[418]
On 25 November, in Odessa, 120 police raided and destroyed a tent encampment made by protesters at 5:20 in the morning. The police detained three of the protesters, including the leader of the Odessa branch of Democratic Alliance, Alexei Chorny. All three were beaten in the police vehicle and then taken to the Portofrankovsk Police Station without their arrival being recorded. The move came after the District Administrative Court hours earlier issued a ban restricting citizens' right to peaceful assembly until New Year. The court ruling places a blanket ban on all demonstrations, the use of tents, sound equipment and vehicles until the end of the year.[419]
On 26 November, a rally of 50 was held in Donetsk.[420]
On 28 November, a rally was held in Yalta; university faculty who attended were pressured to resign by university officials.[421]
On 29 November, Lviv protesters numbered some 20,000.[121] Like in Kiev, they locked hands in a human chain, symbolically linking Ukraine to the European Union (organisers claimed that some 100 people even crossed the Ukrainian-Polish border to extend the chain to the European Union).[121][122]
On 1 December, the largest rally outside of Kiev took place in Lviv by the statue of Taras Shevchenko, where over 50,000 protesters attended. Mayor Andriy Sadovy, council chairman Peter Kolody, and prominent public figures and politicians were in attendance.[30] An estimated 300 rallied in the eastern city of Donetsk demanding that President Viktor Yanukovych and the government of Prime Minister Mykola Azarov resign.[405] Meanwhile, in Kharkiv, thousands rallied with writer Serhiy Zhadan, during a speech, calling for revolution. The protest was peaceful.[422][423][424] Protesters claimed at least 4,000 attended,[35] with other sources saying 2,000.[34]InDnipropetrovsk, 1,000 gathered to protest the EU agreement suspension, show solidarity with those in Kiev, and demand the resignation of local and metropolitan officials. They later marched, shouting "Ukraine is Europe" and "Revolution".[425] EuroMaidan protests were also held in Simferopol (where 150-200 attended),[426] and Odessa.[427]
On 2 December, in an act of solidarity, Lviv Oblast declared a general strike in order to mobilize support for protests in Kiev,[428] which was followed by the formal order of a general strike by the cities of Ternopil and Ivano-Frankivsk.[127]
In Dnipropetrovsk on 3 December, a group of 300 protested in favor of European integration and demanded the resignation of local authorities, heads of local police units, and theSecurity Service of Ukraine (SBU).[429]
On 7 December it was reported that police were prohibiting those from Ternopil and Ivano-Frankivsk from driving to Kiev.[430]
Protests on 8 December saw record turnout in many Ukrainian cities, including several in eastern Ukraine.
On 9 December, a statue to Vladimir Lenin was destroyed in in the town of Kotovsk in Odessa Oblast.[431] In Ternopil, Euromaidan organizers were prosecuted by authorities.[432]
On 14 December, Euromaidan supporters in Kharkiv voiced their disapproval of authorities fencing off Freedom Square from the public by covering the metal fence in placards.[433] They have since 5 December been the victims of theft and arson.[434] A Euromaidan activist in Kharkiv was attacked by two men and stabbed twelve times. The assailants were unknown but activists told the Kharkiv-based civic organization Maidan that they believe the city’s mayor, Gennady Kernes, to be behind the attack.[435]
On 22 December, 2,000 rallied in Dnipropetrovsk.[436]
In late December, 500 marched in Donetsk. Due to the regime's hegemony in the city, '500 marchers to assemble in Donetsk is the equivalent of 50,000 in Lviv or 500,000 in Kiev.'[437] On 5 January, marches in support of Euromaidan were held in Donetsk, Dnipropetrovsk, Odessa, and Kharkiv; the latter three drawing several hundred and Donetsk only 100.[438]
On 11 January, 150 activists met in Kharkiv for a general forum on uniting the nation-wide Euromaidan efforts. A church were some were meeting was stormed by over a dozenthugs, and others attacked meetings in a book store; smashing windows and deploying tear gas to stop the Maidan meetings from taking place.[439]
On 22 January in Donetsk, two simultaneous rallies were held - one pro-Euromaidan and one pro-government. The pro-government rally attracted 600 attendees to about 100 from the Euromaidan side. Police reports claimed 5,000 attended to support the government, to only 60 from Euromaidan. In addition, approximately 150 titushky appeared and encircled the Euromaidan protesters with megaphones and began a conflict, burning wreaths and Svoboda Party flags, and shouted "down with fascists!", but were separated by police.[440] Meanwhile, Donetsk City Council pleaded with the government to take tougher measures against Euromaidan protesters in Kiev.[441] Reports indicated a media blackout took place in Donetsk.[442]
In Lviv on 22 January, amid the police shootings of protesters in the capital, military barracks were surrounded by protesters. Many of the protesters included mothers whose sons are serving in the military, and pleaded with them not to deploy to Kiev.[443]
In Vinnytsia on 22 January thousands protesters blocked the main street of the city and the traffic. Also, they brought "democracy in coffin" to the city hall, as a present to Yanukovych.[444] 23 January Odessa city council member and Euromaidan activist Oleksandr Ostapenko's car was bombed.[445] The Mayor of Sumy threw his support behind the Euromaidan movement on 24 January, laying blame for the civil disorder in Kiev on the Party of Regions and Communists.[446]
Occupation of administrative buildings
Following a standoff between protesters and government forces in Kiev on 23 January, tensions flared as anti-government forces mobilized and overtook a number of western Ukrainian cities, with some forcing local governors to file letters of resignation. By the afternoon, the administrations of Lviv, Rivne and Ternopil, and Khmelnytskyi were also in the hands of thousands of revolutionary protesters.[361][447][448][449][450]
In Lviv, the 2,000 stormed the regional administration building shouting "Revolution!"; Oleh Salo, Chief of Local State Administration and presidential appointee, signed a letter of resignation as a result of the takeover.[361][451] The mayor of Lviv, in response, declared that none of the Black Thursday laws would ever apply on the territory of Lviv.[361] Ternopil city council denounced the Black Thursday laws and demanded they be repealed.[452] Activists in Khmelnytskyi erected barricades around the regional administration, surrounding the building.[453] As a result, Khmelnytskyi local parliament demanded snap elections, the dissolution of the Berkut, and their joining of the People's Rada along with opposition groups in Kiev.[454] Also occupied was Cherkasy, where 20,000 would overtake the administration, but later lose ground to police.[361][455][456] By the end of the 23rd, Lviv, Ternopil, Rivne, and Khmelnytskyi remained in control of anti-government forces.[457] Blockades of local administrations that were not physically overtaken occurred in Sumy, Ivano-Frankivsk,Vinnytsia, Poltava, and Zhytomyr.[457][458]
Prime Minister Azarov has called the occupying force not a part of the political opposition, but rather a rebellion,[459] and president Yanukovych condemned the takeover of public buildings.[457] Counter to the anti-government sentiment, the administration of Crimea announced that it would not respect any outcome from the Euromaidan protests or possible revolution, including if snap elections occurred.[460]
The following day, 24 January, Ivano-Frankivsk was overtaken in its second day of pressure while its governor escaped;[461] meanwhile in Lutsk, 5,000 surrounded the administration building and Volyn Oblast governor Borys Klimchuk resigned, and later, the councilor Volodymyr Voitovych pleaded before the people on his knees before himself resigning as well.[462][463] The administration of Chernivtsi was stormed and occupied, after which governor Mykhailo Papiev resigned.[464] Lutsk and Uzhhorod's administrations were blockaded,[465][466] in addition to standing blockades in Poltava, Vinnytsia, and Zhytomyr.[387][467][468] The governor of Uzhhorod's ranch burned down,[469] and protesters dispersed for the evening with intent to reconvene the next day.[470] In responsive measures, Dnipropetrovsk, Mykolayiv, and Zhytomyr were fortified by police.[471][472][473] By 11 p.m., the regional state administration of Sumy was breached and occupied, but officials refused to capitulate.[474]
On 25th January, protesters managed to occupy the Oblast government building in Chernihiv, demanding the resignation of the governor.[475] Later that day, protesters occupied the chamber of the Oblast parliament in Poltava, forming an impromptu parliament named Nationalna Rada.[476]
Timeline of occupations
- 23 Jan - Lviv, Rivne, Ternopil, and Khmelnytskyi are occupied; Cherkasy is occupied but re-taken by government forces. Lviv governor resigns.
- 24 Jan - Ivan-Frankivsk is occupied but governor flees; Sumy is occupied; Chernivtsi and Lutsk (Volyn) are occupied and governors resign.
Protests outside Ukraine
Smaller protests or Euromaidans were also organized starting on 24 November by Ukrainians and local citizens of Ukrainian descent in countries such as Poland, the United Kingdom, Austria, Germany, France, Italy, Sweden, Austria, the Czech Republic, The Netherlands, Bulgaria, the United States and Canada.[477][478][479][480][481][482][483][484][485][486]
On 29 of November 2013, on the Polish-Ukrainian border crossing in Medyka, Poles and Ukrainians created a human chain as a symbol of a solidarity between the two nations, and as a sign of support for pro-EU protesters in Ukraine.[122]
On 2 December supporters picketed the Embassy of Ukraine in Moscow holding a banner reading "Ukraine, we are with you". 11 participants, including Yaroslavl Oblast Legislative Assembly member Boris Nemtsov, were detained by police[487] and later released on grounds of "violating procedure".[488][489] On 5 December, a rally in support of Euromaidan was also held in St. Petersburg.[490]
In Armenia on 2 December hundreds of people marched through the capital Yerevan to denounce a visit of Russian President Vladimir Putin and to express their solidarity with the pro-European rallies in Ukraine.[491][nb 18] Local media reported that 100 participants were arrested by police.[491]
Pro-government rallies
November pro-government rallies
A pro-government counter protest reportedly gathered 10,000 people on 25 November.[492] The Party of Regions allegedly paid UAH₴100 to its supporters to participate in a three-hour rally, with supporters calling for "building Europe in Ukraine [...] but on terms and conditions favorable for Ukraine".[493] According to the Kyiv Post, demonstrators held anti-EU and homophobic banners.[26] On 29 November a 2-hour 3,000 people strong pro-government rally took place on European Square.[63][494] Party of Regions member of parliament Vladyslav Lukianov told the crowd "I'm sure that our movement to Europe will never change. We support this choice. Let the land shatter from our steps. Together we will win".[63][121] The Kyiv Post again reported incentives were given to attend and described attendants in appearance "to be homeless; still more look drunk. The crowd consists mostly of men."[63] Euronews spoke of many being "bussed in from the east of the country where pro-Russian sentiment is strong. They, too, carried national flags as well as those of the ruling Party of Regions."[90] Many in the crowd refused to talk to Euronews.[123]
On 30 November, several thousand protesters had been brought into Kharkiv on buses to stage a rally to support the government on Freedom Square. Some 170 buses were reported on the scene, and the number of attendees was according to organizers allegedly over 70,000;[495] news agencies reported the size of the crowd to be 40,000.[40] The event lasted only 1 hour.[40] Reports indicated attendees were paid UAH₴50 to attend,[496] and reports indicated that many were public sector workers who did not attend on their own accord.[495] The rally was both pro-administration and pro-European Integration.[495]
A rally in support of President Yanukovych held by the Donetsk Regional State Administration and the Party of Regions was to be held in Donetsk on 2 December, but was cancelled due to failure to organize enough people.[497]
On 3 December, 1,000 attended a rally in Kiev put on by the Party of Regions to support the president.[498] The same day, it was reported by journalists of Espreso.tv that a Party of Regions organized rally in Kiev was paying UAH₴200 to participants via online job postings.[499]
On 4 December, 15,000 rallied in in Donetsk in support of the president, many of whom were bussed in.[41] The Party of Regions denied any allegations of forcing anyone to attend.[500]
December pro-government rallies in Mariinsky park
A rally and tent camp action in support of President Viktor Yanukovych and at initiative of the Party of Regions began on 3 December in Mariinsky park located close by the Verkhovna Rada building (the parliament).[140][501] The Party of Regions's press service reported on Sunday 6 December that over 15,000 people were taking part in a pro-government rally there.[501] According to city police, there were some 3,000 people in the park the day before.,[501] and the press estimated them at 2,000.[502] Police heavily guards this event from not only anti-government protesters,[65] but also from any journalists and on-lookers.
According Segodnya, people attending the pro-government Marinsky Park event were hired or obliged to attend, and forced to stay for a pre-determinted time. In one incident on 8 December, protesters were held at the rally against their will by armed security.[502][better source needed]
Speaking on condition of anonymity to the Kyiv Post, one demonstrator said that participants of the rally are paid UAH₴300 or more in order to earn money without going to work. She also recalled cases when they were not let outside the rally for the whole day, while inside the camp there was a build up of garbage and dirty toilets on the grounds.[503] Mark MacKinnon, senior international correspondent for The Globe and Mail, attempted to interview a demonstrator at the ongoing anti-Maidan, but although was refused the demonstrator indicated to him that she actually supported the Euromaidan protests.[504]
In parliament on 13 December Svoboda leader Oleh Tyahnybok said people on the government payroll in medical, education and other sectors were being bullied into coming to a planned pro-government rally that weekend; Speaker of parliament and Party of Regions member Volodymyr Rybak responded, saying that it is wrong to pressure people and it has to stop.[505]
On 23 December, the pro-government rally ended.[506]
14–15 December pro-government rally in European Square
On December 14 it was announced by the Party of Regions that they intend to hold a rally on European Square under the banner "Let's Save Ukraine".[505][507] The move to create a second rally in the city by officials was condemned by former president Leonid Kravchuk.[508] According to party officials, 20,000 were expected to come from Donetsk and 10,000 from Dnipropetrovsk Oblast.[505] Many others were expected to arrive from Crimea, Odessa Oblast, and a number of other regions.[509] In the lead up to the rally, it was reported on 12 December that "thousands" of residents from Dnipropetrovsk (mostly government employees, students of technical schools, and athletes) were traveling to Kiev to join in the pro-government rallies. Those interviewed said they were doing so reluctantly, and only for 2 days, at a rate of UAH₴400-500 a day.[510][511] It was also reported that state employees were coerced to join the group under threat of dismissal.[19] On the day of the rally, UDAR MP Roman Chereha accused officials of bringing in children from shelters, promising them food and shelter.[512] On 13 December, the Donetsk regional organization of the Party of Regions said that people wishing to go to Kiev will be provided with food rations and will be transported on a specially commissioned train, paid for by the party.[513] In Odessa, several trains carrying roughly 3,000 departed the city carrying students and teachers to participate in the pro-government rally; students, some of the Odessa Law Academy, admitted they would receive school credit for attending, others would receive financial compensation.[514] It was similarly reported in Luhansk that over 1,000 had departed via rail, and those attending were largely coal miners from the region. Luhansk mayor Sergei Kravchenko in an address stated that over 1,500 residents would support the government at the rally.[515] Meanwhile in Zaporizhia, it was reported that a train packed with 1,600 "athletic men and workers of state enterprises and companies" was departing to Kiev. Conductors said it was a private, rented train with tickets not available to the public.[505] In a list released by journalist Tatiana Honchenko, a total of 27 trains, each with on average 20 cars had been rented by the Party of Regions for the weekend event to transport supporters from across Ukraine to Kiev.[516]
Opposition leaders Arseniy Yatseniuk and Ihor Miroshnychenko issued a warning, citing inside information, that authorities were planning to use the large pro-government rally in order to start a civil conflict and justify issuing a state of emergency, which would require the use of Berkut riot police and military to clear European Square and Maidan.[509][517] Yatsenyuk specifically warned against the use of hired thugs (titushky) who will infiltrate and start to wreak havoc in the pro-European encampment cloaked in either European Union or national colors.[509] Opposition leader Yuriy Lutsenko, however, called for calm and assured that the pro-government rally will be attended by peaceful, state-paid employees and students.[509] Oleksandr Yefremov, head of the Party of Regions parliamentary faction reiterated "This will be an exclusively peaceful demonstration, our people are always easy to get along with…we will also rely on the police to create a safe buffer between the two rallies."[509] However, a statement by Party of Regions MP Vadym Kolesnichenko acknowledged the creation of vigilante groups being formed in the south-east of Ukraine and across Crimea to "protect public order and the Constitution", and that one such group in Sevastopol already had already amassed 800 recruits; adding that they would be involved in the events of the weekend.[518] In an interview by Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty with an attendee on the day of the event, the subject (who taught boxing) revealed that he and a group of others were offered UAH₴1,000 by organizers to instigate a fight with protesters on Maidan.[519]
The Interior Ministry's press service told the Kyiv Post on 13 December that the pro-government rally received permission to have up to 200,000 in attendance.[505] According to Zerkalo Nedeli, one of the nation's most influential newspapers, the National Security and Defense Council of Ukraine and government ordered the Ministry of Defense to aid in the provision of security, logistics, deployment of field kitchens, and transportation of 200,000 civilians to hold a pro-government rally in Kiev on the weekend of 14–15 December.[520] The Ministry of Internal Affairs is said to have been requested to aid in the security for those coming to Kiev from other regions of the country.[520] The report was covered in the media by The Insider,[521] UNIAN,[522] andUkrayinska Pravda.[523] The Minister of Defense later denied these rumors, citing Article 17 and Article 37 of the Ukrainian Constitution, which prohibits the participation of the Ukrainian Armed Forces in domestic political fights.[524] Despite this, on 13 December tents were seen being set up on property owned by the Ministry of Defense,[525] and in a separate report by Zerkalo Nedeli it was revealed that the Ministry of Defense had been conducting training exercises over the previous two days, including taking inventory of equipment (ex. field kitchens, vehicles) for support of the pro-governmental protests. Resources were also transferred to Ukpromakord, the food supplier of the Ukrainian Armed Forces.[526] Further, on the day of the event witnesses reported and photographed 40 military field kitchens serving pro-government supporters in Mariinsky Park.[512]
Prime Minister Mykola Azarov spoke at the rally and told attendants that Ukraine did not decline its goal of integrating to the EU "We're allegedly betray Ukraine and sign [the agreement on joining] the Customs Union of Belarus, Kazakhstan, and Russia. I strongly deny these speculations".[527] He referred to statements that Ukrainian authorities where planning to join this Customs Union as "profiteering".[527] Azarov also urged "Don't divide Ukraine, don't build barricades".[528] Azarov also said the EU had insisted on 'unacceptable conditions' sign the AA, including the introduction of gay marriage and laws protecting sexual minorities. "The opposition leaders are telling fables when they say that we only have to sign the [association] agreement [with the EU] to start traveling to Europe visa-free the next day. Nothing of the sort. We have yet to comply with a whole set of preconditions: we have to legalize same-sex marriages, we have to adopt legislation on equality of sexual minorities, and so on. Is our society ready for this?" Azarov said.[529]
At the event, Party of Regions MP Hryhoriy Smitiukh called attendees to appeal to Russian president Vladimir Putin to lower the price of gas in Ukraine, and engaged the crowd in a chant of "Putin! Putin!".[512]
Organizers claimed over 100,000 attended;[530] police estimated 60,000 attended, which was also estimated to be the maximum capacity of the square;[531] eyewitnesses placed the attendance as low as 20,000.[532][533] At 6:00 p.m. Party of Regions head Oleksandr Efremov announced the end of the meeting, a day earlier than planned.[534] By the end of the rally, only 3,000 remained,[512] and by the evening European Square was deserted.[535]
The rally on 15 December ran from 10:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m., and there were various reports that attendees were not paid in full for their time. “People came to express their will. We paid them Hr 300 per day. I did not promise any money to them, I am here with my voters,” said Artur Martovytskiy, a lawmaker from the Party of Regions.[20]
January pro-government rally in Mariinsky park
Another rally by supporters of the Party of Regions began on 13 January 2014 and continued until the adoption of the state budget for 2014 on 17 January.[536][537] According to the organizers people are attending the rally because they want "stability in the country" and believe that it is unacceptable to hinder the adoption of the state budget.[536] Protesters are planning to spend the night in the tent city in Mariinsky park.[536] According to the organizers participants in the rally were collecting signatures that will be sent to the Kiev city council with the request to free the center of Kiev of demonstrators, including Khreshchatyk and Maidan Nezalezhnosti.[536] The organizers stated that the protesters were in favor of a peaceful solution to this issue and were against the violent dispersal of the pro-European rally.[536] Interfax-Ukraine reported on 13 January that about ten tents had been set up in the park and metal shields had been installed perpendicular to Hrushevskoho Street, with law enforcement officers standing behind them.[536]
Prime Minister Azarov criticized Euromaidan coverage in western media, and lack of attention to the 'antimaidan', "The Western media are paying attention to one square and do not pay for another," and said that the antimaidan represents all of Ukraine, whereas Euromaidan as a whole only represents Lviv, Ternopil, and Ivano-Frankivsk. He then stated that the majority of Ukraine supports the president, the government, and no longer has interest in European integration.[538]
Another rally by supporters of the Party of Regions (planned to bring up to 10,000 attendees) in Mariinsky park began on 21 January 2014 against an alleged attempted "coup" by the Euromaidan protesters.[537] It is planned to continue until the end of the 2014 Hrushevskoho Street riots.[537]
"Anti-maidans"
The Communist Party of Ukraine planned to gather 2,000 supporters to a 24 November 2013 rally against signing agreements with the European Union.[539] Communists that did attend, set up tents near the statue of Lenin in Kyiv, intending to protect it from vandalism.[540]
On 25 November in Sevastopol the Russian Bloc and the Communist Party of Ukraine organized an "Anti-Maidan".[541] The meeting was conducted in support of joining the Customs Union of Belarus, Kazakhstan, and Russia.[541] Previous rallies by the Russian Bloc in the weeks prior included EU flag burning and anti-government, and anti-Ukrainian rhetoric,[542][nb 19] On 26 November, another anti-Maidan protest was organized in Donetsk, attracting only 30 student protesters. Organizers stated that the European Union had ruined the economies of new members, and that joining would bring corruption and gay marriage.[420] The protest was counter to the pro-EU EuroMaidan protest 200 meters away, which attracted no more than 50 protesters. The next day, a small anti-Maidan rally was held by the Russian Bloc and Communists in Mykolaiv.[544] At a November 25 rally in Luhansk, protesters were met with resistance from a group of Don Cossacks, who were against EU membership and referred to pro-EU protesters as fascists.[545]
A 1 December Communist rally in Donetsk gathered about 200 mostly elderly supporters who chanted: "The union of Ukraine, Russia and Belarus is inevitable".[546] The following day, Communist Party of Ukraine MP Antonina Khromova made statements at the Donetsk regional council, approving the use of force to remove protesters in Kiev, which was met with applause. She continued by saying that Ukraine does not need European values, namely, "same-sex marriage" and "African pan handlers".[547]
The Sevastopol city council, on the initiative of the Russian Bloc, opted to appeal to the President and the Government of Ukraine to reorient foreign policy towards Russia and its Customs Union.[548] The Russian Bloc has also demanded the resignation of Minister of Education Dmytro Tabachnyk, for not preventing students from taking part in the Euromaidan protests.[549] On 8 December, the "Russian Community of Sevastopol" organization held a rally in support of Berkut anti-riot troops who made headlines for assaulting students and journalists in Kiev the week prior. Leader of the group, Tatiana Ermakova, expressed outrage at the fact that, according to her, protesters provoked and attacked Berkut troops. "No country in the world would allow such lawlessness which, the for the 17th day occurs on the Maidan," she said.[550] The official statement from Russian Community specifically thanked the anti-riot troops for 'protecting us from the fascists', and called the Euromaidan demonstrators "Nazis" and "Banderites".[551]
On 14 December the leaders of the Russian Bloc and Russian Unity met with the Consul General of Russia in Crimea, Vyacheslav Svitlychny, and declared the preparation of an anti-maidan to demand the secession of Crimea from Ukraine.[552]
Repressions against protesters and parliamentarian opposition
Selective justice
- Police cooperation with people of unknown identity who became known as titushky.
- On 25 November 2013 unknown people attacked a protesting tent city in Dnipropetrovsk, while police was witnessing the event.[553]
- On 5 January 2014 Petro Poroshenko handed over to the Prosecutor General office explicit video evidences of participation in provocations people who cooperate with law enforcement.[554] Also there is a video of person who ground guides the bulldozer and seems very similar to one of regimental commanders of Berkut.[555] The Ministry of Internal Affairs called the video a provocation, yet was not able to explain the similarity.[556] The officer himself denies any accusations.[556]
False accusations
- On 5 December 2013 there appeared accusations of the Ministry of Internal Affairs in the December 1 riots radical and nationalistic faction Bratstvo, parliamentary faction Svoboda, and football fans "Ultras".[557] That is after a day prior to that, Social-National Assembly officially took responsibility in the actions.[558]
- Late at night on 24 January 2014 the Ministry of Internal Affairs accused protesters in violating a truce.[559] That happened almost an hour late after the Channer 5 reported that stand off renewed and Berkut opened fire with rubber bullets at protesters.[560]
Repressions against political opponents
- On 5 December 2013 there appeared accusations of the Ministry of Internal Affairs in all riots radical and nationalistic faction Bratstvo, parliamentary faction Svoboda, and football fans "Ultras".[561]
- On 9 December 2013 police without any sanctions violently at night raided main office of the opposition party "Batkivshchyna" (Fatherland).
Detained
- On 24 November 2013 two members of Svoboda were jailed for 60 days.[562] One of the convicted is a disabled person.[562] Svoboda's activists are suspected in rowdiness with use of firearm or cold weapon in order to inflict injuries.[562]
- On December 3, 2013 nine random[563] people were jailed for 60 days.[564] They were detained under suspicion in participation in attack on Berkut near the Presidential Administration on 1 December 2013.[564] On 4 December 2013 the Social National Assembly (SNA) took responsiblity for the attack at Bankova and occupation of administrative buildings in the center of city.[565]
- On 6 December 2013 Andriy Dzyndzia, a journalist of the Road Control, was detained as a preventative measures for two months.[566] After announcement of the court decision a fight took place in the court hallroom between parliamentarians and police.[566] During that time near the court building took place a picket of 5,000 people in protest of the court decision.[566]
Accusation of tortures or cruelty
- On 4 December 2013 a lawyer of one journalist accused police in use of tortures towards his client.[567]
- During his arrest by servicemen of HUBOZ on 5 December 2013, Dzyndzia was severely beaten to the point that it was necessary to take him unconscious to emergency room.[568] HUBOZ officers refused to explain the reason for his arrest neither to Dzyndzia himself nor his lawyers whom meeting with Dzyndzia was denied.[568]
Press and medics injured by police attacks
There were number of incidents when law enforcement personnel was attacking members of press media and medical personnel. Some 40 journalists were injured during the staged assault at Bankova street on December 1, 2013. At least 42 more journalists were victims of police attacks at vulytsia Hrushevskoho on January 22, 2014.[569] On January 22, 2014 Television News Service (TSN) reported that journalist start to take down their identifying uniform (vests and helmets) as their being targeted sometimes on purpose, sometimes accidentally.[570]
- On January 21, 26 journalists in total were injured, with at least two badly injured by police stun grenades;[571] a further 2 were arrested by police.[572]
- On January 22 a correspondent of Reuters Vasiliy Fedosenko was intentionally shot in head by a sniper with rubber ammunition during clashes at vulytsia Hrushevskoho.[573][574][575] Later, a journalist of Espresso TV Dmytro Dvoychenkov was kidnapped, beaten up and taken to unknown location, but later one of parliamentarians informed that he was finally released.[576]
On January 24 President Yanukovych ordered to release from custody all journalists.[577]
Deaths
Major casualties has occurred on the Day of National Unity in Ukraine. On 22 January 2014 at least five people were confirmed dead during the clashes on January 22,[578] four people perished from gunshot wounds,[578] four people permanently lost their vision.[579] Medics confirmed bullet wounds to be from firearms such as a Degtyaryov sniper rifle (7.62 mm) and possibly a Makarov handgun (9mm) in the deaths of Nihoyan and Zhyznewski.[580] There are photos of Berkut utilizing shotguns (such as the RPC Fort), and reporters verified the presence of shotgun casings littering the ground.[581] Ukrainian Prosecutor General's Office confirmed two deaths from gunshot wounds in Kyiv protests.[582]
- Pavlo Mazurenko (41 years old) was beaten up on 18 December 2013 by three law enforcement agents in the neighborhood of Borshchahivka (Mykilska).[583] On December 21, he visited a doctor who sent him to a hospital where Mazurenko was diagnosed with a concussion.[583] The same day he was hospitalized doctors found fractures to his skull.[583] On December 22 Mazurenko passed away and his body was sent for forensic examination, after which he was diagnosed with two way pleuropneumonia (lung plaque seen in bovine animals), causing outrage from his wife.[583]
- During the Hrushevskoho street riots, a 22 year old man died falling from the colonnade near the Lobanovsky Dynamo Stadium during a beating by police; the cause of death was multiple injuries particularly spine fracture.[584]
- Serhiy Nigoyan (20 years old) was a native Ukrainian of Armenian descent from Solone Raion, Dnipropetrovsk Oblast.[585][586] On January 22, Serhiy suffered multiple shot wounds during Berkut's attack on barricades.[585]
- Two more people were found dead in Boryspil Raion, Kiev with marks of torture.[587][588] One of the dead victims was confirmed Yuriy Verbytsky (50 years old),[589][590] a seismologist from Lviv, who along with Ihor Lutsenko were previously kidnapped from Oleksandrivska clinic in Kiev.[589][591] The Ministry of Internal Affairs denies the fact the kidnapping took place.[591] According to Ihor Lutsenko, police had been known for abducting dissidents from hospitals,[592] where people are then taken outside the city limits, tortured, beaten, and then returned to the police district precinct.[592] On January 21, in an interview Lutsenko stated that Verbytsky was tortured with greater malice only because he was from Lviv, and that he believed the men to be from eastern Ukraine.[593] Police stated that the official cause of Verbytsky's death was hypothermia, and that his injuries "were not connected with his death."[594]
- Mikhail "Loki" Zhyznewski,[595] a Belarusian citizen, who was shot dead by police on 22 January.[596][597][598] Mikhail was shot in the chest near his heart by a sniper.[598] It was confirmed that Zhyznewski was from Homiel and lived in Bila Tserkva,[595] and was a member of the UNA-UNSO.[599]
- Two more shooting victims were announced by Euromaidan medical service coordinators by Wednesday evening.[581] The identity of those two remains unknown as their bodies disappeared from street after the assault of Berkut in the early morning 22 January 2014.[600] That fact was announced by coordinator of Euromaidan medical service Oleh Musiy during his interview on Hromadske.TV on 24 January 2014 at 20:06 (EET).
- On January 24, 2014 at night in Holosiiv Raion the body of a State Security Service (DSO) officer was found with a bullet wound to the head.[601] According to the MVS press-release, the body of the 27 year old serviceman was discovered by security guards who worked nearby.[601] The press-release mentioned that he was returning home from work unarmed,[601] and lived near the Berkut barracks.[601] MVS did not report his name.
Responses
- Party of Regions MP Arsen Klinchayev stated during a memorial service in Luhansk for those killed on 22 January by police, "These people were against the government. Nobody has the right to use physical force against police officers. And then they have their sticks, then stones, then something else. The police have the right to defend their lives. So I think it right that these four people were killed. Moreover, I believe that you need to be stricter."[602]
- Prime Minister Mykola Azarov in an interview with BBC denied police being armed and denied any being located on the roofs of buildings, and that the shooting of protesters must have been done by provocateurs attempting to escalate violence.[603] Later, Party of Regions MP Evheny Balitsky accused NATO of deploying snipers to kill the victims.[604]
Demands
On 29 November, a formal from organizers resolution proposed the following:[63]
- Form a coordinating committee to communicate with the European community.
- To state that the president, parliament and the Cabinet of Ministers aren't capable of carrying out a geopolitically strategic course of development for the state and calls on Yanukovych's resignation.
- Demand the cessation of political repressions against EuroMaidan activists, students, civic activists and opposition leaders.
The resolution stated that on 1 December, on the 22nd anniversary of Ukraine's independence referendum, that the group will gather at noon on Independence Square to announce their further course of action.[63]
After the (on the night of) 30 November forceful disperse of all protesters from Maidan Nezalezhnosti the dismissal of Minister of Internal Affairs Vitaliy Zakharchenko became one of the main demands.[605]
A petition to the U.S. White House demanding sanctions against Viktor Yanukovych and Ukrainian government ministers gathered over 100,000 signatures in four days.[606][607][608][609]
Students nationwide have also demanding the dismissal of Minister of Education Dmytro Tabachnyk.
On 5 December Batkivshchyna faction leader Arseniy Yatsenyuk stated "Our three demands to the Verkhovna Rada and the president remained unchanged: the resignation of the government, the release of all political prisoners, first and foremost, [former Ukrainian Prime Minister] Yulia Tymoshenko, and nine individuals who were illegally convicted [who were present at a rally on Bankova Street on December 1] and the suspension of all criminal cases, and the arrest of all Berkut officers who were involved in the illegal beating up of children on Maidan Nezalezhnosti".[610] The opposition also demanded that the government resumed negotiations with the IMF for a loan that they saw as key to helping Ukraine "through economic troubles that have made Yanukovych lean toward Russia".[611]
Domestic responses
International reactions
Guy Verhofstadt, a Member of the European Parliament, claimed that Euromaidan "is the largest pro-European demonstration in the history of the European Union".[612]
Impact
Some known impacts to date include the following:
Support for Euromaidan in Ukraine
According to an 4 to 9 December 2013 study[71] by Research & Branding Group 49% of all Ukrainians supported Euromaidan and 45% had the opposite opinion. It was mostly supported in West (84%) and Central Ukraine (66%). A third (33%) of residents of South Ukraine and 13% of residents of Eastern Ukraine supported Euromaidan as well. The percentage of people who do not support the protesters was in East Ukraine 81%, in South Ukraine 60%, in Central Ukraine 27% and in Western Ukraine 11%. Polls have shown that two-thirds of Kievans supports the ongoing protests.[70]
An Ilko Kucheriv Democratic Initiatives Foundation survey of protesters conducted 7 and 8 December 2013 found that 92% of those who came to Kiev from across Ukraine came on their own initiative, 6.3% was organized by a public movement, and 1.8% were organized by a party.[3][613] 70% said they came to protest the police brutality of November 30, and 54% to protest in support of the European Union Association Agreement signing. Among their demands, 82% wanted detained protesters freed, 80% wanted the government to resign, and 75% want president Yanukovych to resign and for snap elections.[3][177] The poll showed that 49.8% of the protesters are residents of Kiev and 50.2% came from across Ukraine. Thirty-eight percent of the protesters are aged between 15 and 29, 49% are aged between 30 and 54, and 13% are 55 or older. A total of 57.2% of the protesters are men.[3][613]
A Research & Branding Group survey conducted from 23 December to 27 December showed that 50% of Ukrainians don't support Euromaidan, while 45% did support it.[69] 43% of those polled thought that Euromaidan's consequences "sooner could be negative", while 31% of the respondents thought the opposite; 17% believed that Euromaidan would bring no negative consequences.[69]
Popular opinion in Ukraine about Association Agreement during Euromaidan
According to an 4 to 9 December 2013 study[71] by Research & Branding Group 46% of Ukrainians supported the integration of the country into EU, and 36% - into the Customs Union of Belarus, Kazakhstan, and Russia. Most support for EU integration could be found in West (81%) and in Central (56%) Ukraine; 30% of residents of South Ukraine and 18% of residents of Eastern Ukraine supported the integration with EU as well. Integration with the Customs Union was supported by 61% of East Ukraine and 54% of South Ukraine and also by 22% of Central and 7% of Western Ukraine.
Social impact
"Euromaidan" has been named as word of the year for 2013 by modern Ukrainian language and slang dictionary Myslovo,[614] and the most popular neologism in Russia by web analytics company Public.ru.[615]
Economic impact
Moody's Investors Service reported on 4 December 2013 "As a consequence of the severity of the protests, demand for foreign currency is likely to rise" and noted that this was another blow to Ukraine's already poor solvency.[616] First deputy Prime Minister Serhiy Arbuzov stated on 7 December Ukraine risked a default if failed to raise $10 billion "I asked for a loan to support us, and Europe [the EU] agreed, but a mistake was made - we failed to put it on paper".[617]
On 5 December Prime Minister Mykola Azarov stated that "money to finance the payment of pensions, wages, social payments, support of the operation of the housing and utility sector and medical institutions do not appear due to unrest in the streets" and he added that authorities were doing everything possible to ensure the timely financing of them.[618] Minister of Social Policy of Ukraine Natalia Korolevska stated on 2 January 2014 that these January 2014 payments would begin according to schedule.[619]
On 3 December Azarov had warned Ukraine might not be able to fulfill its natural gas contracts with Russia.[620] And he blamed the deal on restoring gas supplies of 18 January 2009 for this.[620]
On 11 December the second Azarov Government moved the date of social payments due to "the temporarily blocking of the government".[621] The same day Reuters commented (when talking about Euromaidan) "The crisis has added to the financial hardship of a country on the brink of bankruptcy" and added that (at the time) investors thought it more likely than not that Ukraine would default over the next five years (since it then cost Ukraine over $1 million a year to insure $10 million in state debt).[622]
Fitch Ratings reported on 16 December that the (political) "standoff" had lead to "greater the risk that political uncertainty will raise demand for foreign currency, causing additional reserve losses and increasing the risk of disorderly currency movement".[623] It also added "Interest rates rose sharply as the National Bank sought to tighten hryvnia liquidity".[623]
First Deputy Finance Minister Anatoliy Miarkovsky stated on 17 December the Ukrainian government budget deficit in 2014 could amount to about 3% with a "plus or minus" deviation of 0.5%.[624]
On 18 December, the day after an economical agreement with Russia was signed, Prime Minister Mykola Azarov stated "Nothing is threatening stability of the financial-economic situation in Ukraine now. Not a single economic factor".[625] However, BBC News reported that the deal "will not fix Ukraine's deeper economic problems" in an article called Russian bailout masks Ukraine's economic mess.[626]
On 21 January 2014 the Kiev City State Administration claimed that protests in Kiev had so far caused the city more then 2 million U.S. dollars worth of damage.[627] It intended to claim compensation for damage caused by all demonstrators, regardless of their political affiliation.[627]
See also
- Ukraine without Kuchma
- Orange Revolution
- Tax Maidan
- Rise up, Ukraine!
- Fall of the monument to Lenin in Kiev
- Domestic responses to the Euromaidan
- International reactions to the Euromaidan
Notes
- ^ Since 1 December 2013 Kiev's Town Hall has been occupied by Euromaidan-protesters; this forced the Kiev City Council to meet in the Solomianka Raion state administration building instead.[9]
- ^ Reports of some protesters attending under duress from superiors[19]
- ^ "Titushky" are alleged provocators during protests.[23]
- ^ Early November 2012 Communist Party party leader Petro Symonenko stated that his party will not cooperate with other parties in the new parliament elected in the 2012 Ukrainian parliamentary election.[24] Nevertheless; in the current parliament its parliamentary faction usually votes similarly to the Party of Regions parliamentary faction.[25]
- ^ The term "Euromaidan" was initially used as a hashtag on Twitter.[55] A Twitter account named Euromaidan was created on the first day of the protests.[56] It soon became popular in the international media.[57] It is composed of two parts: "Euro" is short for Europe and "maidan" refers to Maidan Nezalezhnosti (Independence Square), the main square of Kiev, where the protests are centered.[55]
- ^ On 7 April 2013 a decree by Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych freed Yuriy Lutsenko from prison and exempted him from further punishment.[75]
- ^ On 20 December 2013 Ukrainian Prime Minister Mykola Azarov stated that the public had not been given clear explanations by the authorities of the reason of the decree suspended preparations for signing of the association agreement.[83]
- ^ On 10 December President Yanukovych stated "We will certainly resume the IMF negotiations. If there are conditions that suit us, we will take that path".[88] However, Yanukovych also (once again) stated that the conditions put forward by the IMF were unacceptable "I had a conversation with U.S. Vice President Joseph Biden, who told me that the issue of the IMF loan has almost been solved, but I told him that if the conditions remained... we did not need such loans".[88]
- ^ The Kiev City Council building remained occupied by protesters with 'Revolution HQ' painted on the facade.[128]
- ^ BBC correspondent David Stern reported on 2 December "Protesters also continue to occupy the Kiev city administration building. The scene inside is chaotic - and sometimes comical, with thousands of people streaming through as if on a tourist excursion."[125]
- ^ Because Azarov addressed the parliament in Russian his speech was at times inaudible and drowned out by chants of "Speak Ukrainian!" and "Resign!" by Ukrainian nationalist MPs.[131]
- ^ "Many people say that central television channels don't cover events in our industrial regions, don't show rallies in support of the government, although these regions form 90% of public revenues," he wrote on Facebook on 6 December 2013.[143] The same day he also wrote on Facebook "Dear friends, first of all we need to calm down now, put aside emotions and think hard and seriously. We have proposed the only right and correct way in this situation. We hope our EU partners will meet us halfway and understand that they should lend a helping hand to Ukraine now".[144]
- ^ Traditionally Ukraine imports natural gas mainly from Russia (about two-thirds of its gas in 2012).[166][167] Natural gas is Ukraine's biggest import at present and is the main cause of the country's structural trade deficit.[168]
- ^ President Yanukovych addressed the opposition specifically "For the sake of compromise I am urging the opposition not to refuse, not to follow the path of confrontation and ultimatums".[239]
- ^ The driver of the car was later arrested, who then after police questioning identified the two other attackers, one of which was arrested.[citation needed] In total five suspected attackers have been detained by the Ukrainian police.[295]
- ^ Party of Regions faction leader Oleksandr Yefremov called on 17 January 2014 for further measures to easier strip members of parliament of immunity "I believe we should remove an MPs immunity from prosecution. I’d vote for that, because members of parliament are able to hide behind this immunity and act like heros. If this immunity was removed these heros would soon become afraid".[322]
- ^ President of the European Parliament Martin Schulz also urged President Yanukovych not to sign the laws and stated "If they become law, they would push Ukraine back towards its authoritarian, Soviet past".[325] Freedom House did too urge President Yanukovych not to sign the laws; it stated "Freedom House strongly condemns the approval by Ukraine's Rada (parliament) of legislation that criminalizes libel, imposes Russian-style 'foreign agent' restrictions on civil society groups receiving foreign funding, and punishes civic participation in protests".[326]
- ^ They also protested against Armenia's decision in September 2013 to pull out of an Association Agreement with the EU and instead to join the Customs Union of Belarus, Kazakhstan, and Russia.[491]
- ^ These rallies were described by Batkivshchyna MP Volodymyr Yavorivsky as "raving madness".[543]
References
- ^ a b c EuroMaidan rallies in Ukraine – Nov. 21–23 coverage, Kyiv Post (25 November 2013)
- ^ Danylo Spolsky. "One minister's dark warning and the ray of hope". Kyiv Post. Retrieved 27 November 2013.
- ^ a b c d e f Ukrainian opposition uses polls to bolster cause, Euronews (13 December 2013)
- ^ "Ukrainian opposition calls for President Yanukovych's impeachment". Interfax-Ukraine. Kyiv Post. 21 November 2013. Retrieved 27 November 2013.
- ^ Herszenhorn, David M. (1 December 2013). "Thousands of Protesters in Ukraine Demand Leader's Resignation". New York Times. Retrieved 2 December 2013.
- ^ Brian Bonner (21 November 2013). "Two petition drives take aim at Yanukovych". Kyiv Post. Retrieved 27 November 2013.
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suggested) (help) - ^ "На "Межигір'я" рушила колона автомобілів: активісти хочуть заблокувати президента" (in Ukrainian). Televiziyna Sluzhba Novyn. 1 December 2013.
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ignored (|trans-title=
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- ^ Advocate: police was conducting tortures to the arrested on December 1. Urkayinska Pravda. 4 December 2013
- ^ a b HUBOZ arrested Road Control journalist Andriy Dzyndzia. (video). newsradio.com. 6 December 2013
- ^ Only at Hrushevskoho suffered 42 journalists (Лише на Грушевського постраждали 42 журналісти). Ukrayinska Pravda. 22 January 2014
- ^ Journalists are disguising themselves as regular protesters for own safety. TSN. January 22, 2014
- ^ "At least two reporters injured by stun grenade in Kyiv". Interfax-Ukraine. Kyiv Post. 20 January 2014. Retrieved 22 January 2014.
- ^ Mark Rachkevych (20 January 2014). "Watchdog: 26 journalists injured in police clashes, two detained". Kyiv Post. Retrieved 22 January 2014.
- ^ Belarusian photocorrespondent in Kiev was shot. Belapan. 22 January 2014
- ^ Belarusian journalist suffered during the events in Kiev. naviny.by. 22 January 2014
- ^ In Kiev sniper wounded a journalist. Belarusian partizan. 22 January 2014
- ^ Police assault journalist providing live video for Espresso TV. Kyiv Post. 22 January 2014
- ^ Ukrainian president demands all detained reporters be released immediately, Interfax-Ukraine (24 January 2014)
- ^ a b Medics on Hrushevskoho inform about five people being dead. Ukrayinska Pravda. 22 January 2014
- ^ Four victims after the clashes on Hrushevskoho were left without eyes (Четверо потерпілих після зіткнень на Грушевського залишилися без очей - Геращенко). UNIAN. 21 January 2014
- ^ One of the victims was shot today by a sniper, another was killed from a handgun - medics. UNIAN. 22 January 2014
- ^ a b "Five killed, at least 300 injured, in police assaults on EuroMaidan protesters". Kyiv Post. 22 January 2014. Retrieved 22 January 2014.
- ^ Ukrainian Prosecutor General's Office confirmed two deaths from gunshot wounds in Kyiv protests. Kyiv Post. 22 January 2014
- ^ a b c d Law enforcement agents beat up a man for the Euromaidan. He died in hospital. Ukrayinska Pravda. 24 December 2013
- ^ Mass media: Activist who was beaten by Berkut on colonnade of Dynamo died (ЗМІ: Активіст, побитий "Беркутом" на колонаді "Динамо", помер). espreso.tv. 22 January 2014
- ^ a b It became known the name of person who was shot on vulytsia Hrushevskoho (ВІДОМО ІМ'Я ЛЮДИНИ, ЯКУ ЗАСТРЕЛИЛИ НА ГРУШЕВСЬКОГО). Ukrayinska Pravda. January 22, 2014
- ^ Slain activist remembered as 'wonderful person' who 'helped everyone'. Kyiv Post. 22 January 2014
- ^ In Boryspil Raion of Kiev Oblast found two bodies with marks of tortures (В Бориспольском районе Киевской области обнаружены два трупа со следами пыток). Mirror Weekly. 22 January 2014
- ^ In Boryspil Raion found two bodies with marks of torture (У Бориспільському районі виявлено два трупи зі слідами тортур). Ukrayinska Pravda. 22 January 2014
- ^ a b Brother of Yuriy Verbytskyi recognized the body that was found in woods (Брат Юрія Вербицького упізнав тіло, знайдене у лісосмузі). Radio Svoboda. 22 January 2014
- ^ Verbytsky who was kidnapped along with Ihor Lutsenko was found dead (Вербицький, якого викрадали разом з Ігорем Луценком, знайдений мертвим). Gazette in Ukrainian (gazeta.ua). 22 January 2014
- ^ a b MVS denies detaining the activist Ihor Lutsenko (МВС заперечує, що затримало активіста Ігоря Луценка). BBC Ukrainian. 21 January 2014
- ^ a b Activist of Euromaidan Ihor Lutsenko was found (Активіст Євромайдану Ігор Луценко знайшовся). Deutsche Welle. 21 January 2014
- ^ Tortured in woods and interrogation about Maidan: Kidnapping of Ihor Lutsenko (Катування у лісі та допити про Майдан: викрадення Ігоря Луценка). Ukrayinska Pravda. 21 January 2014
- ^ "МВС: Вербицький помер від переохолодження". Espreso TV. 23 January 2014. Retrieved 23 January 2014.
- ^ a b Killing of a Belarus native in Kiev was confirmed to Radio Svoboda. Radio Svoboda. January 22, 2014
- ^ "Belarusian citizen killed in clashes in Kyiv - media". Interfax-Ukraine. 22 January 2014. Retrieved 24 January 2014.
- ^ "На Грушевського вбито п'ятеро людей". Espreso TV. 22 January 2014. Retrieved 23 January 2014.
- ^ a b "Вбито третього мітингувальника". Espreso TV. 22 January 2014. Retrieved 24 January 2014.
- ^ "Вбито Локкі!!!". УНА-УНСО Рівне. Retrieved 23 January 2014.
- ^ Another protesters is located in hospital in critical condition after a gunshot wound. Mirror Weekly. 22 January 2014
- ^ a b c d In Kiev was shot a policeman. Ukrayinska Pravda. 24 January 2014
- ^ "Луганський регіонал назвав правильною загибель людей у Києві". Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty. 3 January 2014. Retrieved 23 January 2014.
- ^ "Микола Азаров: демонстрантів могли застрелити провокатори". BBC Ukrainian. 23 January 2014. Retrieved 23 January 2014.
- ^ "В ПР говорят, что активиста на Грушевского мог убить снайпер НАТО". Liga. 23 January 2014. Retrieved 23 January 2014.
- ^ Ukraine's interior minister has no intention to resign, Interfax-Ukraine (5 December 2013)
- ^ More than 100,000 people petition Obama for sanctions against Yanukovych. Kyiv Post. 30 November 2013
- ^ White House website petition against Yanukovych signed by 63,000. Voice of Russia.
- ^ The United States will not consider a petition against Yanukovych, but relations between the two countries deteriorate – O.Haran. unn.com
- ^ Petition for sanctions against Yanukovych gathers 45,000 votes. ZIK.
- ^ Yatseniuk: Current political crisis cannot be resolved through parliamentary methods, Interfax-Ukraine (5 December 2013)
- ^ Ukraine opposition: no talks unless government fired, CBC News (7 December 2013)
- ^ EuroMaidan is the largest demonstration in EU history , UA Today, Retrieved 14.01.2014
- ^ a b "Poll: Over 70 percent of Euromaidan participants are ready to protest for as long as is needed". Kyiv Post. 13 December 2013. Retrieved 14 December 2013.
- ^ «Євромайдан» — слово року, і не тільки в Україні, Газета.ua, Retrieved 14.01.2014
- ^ Євромайдан і Тітушко — неологізми року в Росії, Газета.ua, Retrieved 14.01.2014
- ^ Protests in Ukraine up risk of growth in foreign currency demand, says Moody's, Interfax-Ukraine (4 December 2013)
- ^ Ukraine needs $10 bln to avoid default - deputy PM, Interfax-Ukraine (7 December 2013)
- ^ Money for pensions, wages, social payments short due to actions of protesters, says Ukrainian premier, Interfax-Ukraine (5 December 2013)
- ^ Korolevska: Payment of pensions in January to begin according to schedule, Interfax-Ukraine (2 January 2014)
- ^ a b Ukraine might not be able to fulfill gas contracts with Russia, says Ukrainian premier, Interfax-Ukraine (3 December 2013)
- ^ Azarov: Full repayment of debt on social payments postponed until end of this year due to protests, Interfax-Ukraine (11 December 2013)
- ^ Ukraine protesters defy police, leaders reject talks with president, Reuters (11 December 2013)
- ^ a b Fitch: Ukraine protests increase pressure on credit profile, Interfax-Ukraine (16 December 2013)
- ^ Ukraine's budget deficit in 2014 expected at 3% of GDP – Finance Ministry, Interfax-Ukraine (17 December 2013)
- ^ Nothing threatening Ukraine's economic, financial stability now - PM Azarov, Interfax-Ukraine (18 December 2013)
- ^ http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-25430980 Russian bailout masks Ukraine's economic mess, BBC News (18 December 2013)
- ^ a b Protests cause multi-mln-USD damage to Ukrainian capital: official, Xinhua News Agency (21 January 2014)
External links
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