Yulia #Tymoshenko to go to Charité clinic in Berlin soon, her spox tells @ukrpravda_news
— Myroslava Petsa (@myroslavapetsa) February 24, 2014
Self defence units and ultras taking control over Kharkiv executive administration |PR News #Euromaidan #Ukraine #Kyi pic.twitter.com/y062mYekNt
— Euromaidan PR (@EuromaidanPR) February 24, 2014
Leaflet calling Sevastopol residents to sign up for militia says the "blue brown Europlague is knocking" pic.twitter.com/jtscHRRxEq
— Paul Sonne (@PaulSonne) February 24, 2014
The Foreign Ministry also said Moscow is surprised by Western support for plans to hold an early presidential election in Ukraine.
It says constitutional reforms should first be put to a referendum, and the concerns of lawmakers in Crimea, and southern and eastern Ukraine, must be taken into account.
Dobkin is now the governor of the Kharkiv Oblast. Both are members of the Yanukovych's Party of Regions.
Be warned, the exchange is very sweary, but illuminating none the less.
Meanwhile, this from Interfax. Kernes is not planning to step down as Kharkiv mayor, although he did give the briefing from the airport.
KHARKIV. Feb 24 (Interfax) - Kharkiv Mayor Gennady Kernes has no
intention of resigning at the session of the city council scheduled for
Wednesday, February 26.
"I would like to announce that you should not expect any statements
on my resignation at the session of the Kharkiv City Council," Kernes
told a briefing at the Kharkiv international airport.
For a bit more background on Kernes, check out this story by our Ukrainian Service (in English) about the closure of local television channels, which were often critical of the authorities.
Balaclava today. The place where President Yanukovich was last seen at midnight last night pic.twitter.com/m6gPTLEJLv
— Daniel Sandford (@BBCDanielS) February 24, 2014
Chornovol has reported on her blog that the ousted president might be preparing to flee Ukraine aboard a yacht called the "Bandido."
The report remains in the realm of rumor ("The Guardian" says today that in Balaclava there was no sign of either Yanukovych or the yacht, reputed to be owned by his son.) But it's prompted a few waggish responses on Twitter.
Here's a picture:
А с этим теперь - что ? С Bandido ? Собак в Межигорье кормить нечем и некому.. А тут - цельная яхта ! pic.twitter.com/4BKBlUOpcq
— Andrei Cherny (@Andrei_Cherny) February 23, 2014
Tweets with translations:"The yacht citizen Yanukovych is using to try and slip out of Crimea proudly bears the touching name of BANDIDO."
"Yanukovych's son has a yacht called Bandido. All street thugs are the same."яхта на которой гражданин януковский пытается или пытался слинять из крыма гордо носит трогательное название "BANDIDO"
— Артем Зелений (@ELWindsor) February 24, 2014
"If Yanukovych's son's yacht is called Bandido, then Putin's daughter likely has one called kickback."у сына Януковича яхта называется Bandido. Все гопники одинаковы
— Pavel Pryanikov (@netovetz) February 24, 2014
Если у сына януковича яхта называется Bandido то у дочери путина вероятней всего зовётся otkato.
— семён шиляев (@saimon190281) February 24, 2014
Medvedev said there was no one to deal with in Ukraine, as masked and armed men could not be partners for dialogue.
He called the recognition of Kyiv authorities by some states an "aberration." Medvedev said all of Russia's legally binding agreements with Ukraine will be fulfilled, but he also said that agreements on lower prices for Russian gas supplies reached with ousted President Viktor Yanukovych were not open-ended and would have to be renegotiated.
European Commission spokesman Olivier Bailly said Monday in Brussels that the Ukrainian parliament, which on Saturday appointed Turchynov to succeed Yanukovych, took "a legitimate and democratic decision."
Russian Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev says the legitimacy of the current authorities in Ukraine is in doubt, saying the recognition of them by some states is an "aberration."
[…]
The sotnyi say they are needed to protect Ukraine's people and institutions of power during a time of political flux, at least until a new president is elected on May 25.
But it now appears their ambitions extend far beyond Kiev, into Yanukovich's eastern heartland, a collection of mainly Russian-speaking regions that are uneasy with events in the capital.
[…]
With this in mind, Ruslan said sotnyi members were heading east.
"They're going to Donetsk, Kharkiv, Lugansk - regions where there's lots still to be done," he said.
[…]
"We're seeing hundreds of volunteers every day. We're now sending some out east, to Kharkiv and elsewhere," said Lyubomir, a 58-year-old veteran of the Soviet army who said he served in the Caucasus.
Young recruits in assorted military garb traipsed past him, flashing their improvised security passes.
Some on the Maidan, however, fear the expansion east may be seen as an act of aggression, resented by easterners who look to old connections with Russia rather than Europe as a guarantee of stability.