Accessibility links

Breaking News
Ukraine's acting Foreign Minister Andriy Deshchytsya speaks to the UN General Assembly on March 27.
Ukraine's acting Foreign Minister Andriy Deshchytsya speaks to the UN General Assembly on March 27.

Live Blog: UN Backs Ukraine Integrity

Final Summary For March 27

-- The UN General Assembly has passed a resolution that affirms Ukraine's territorial integrity.

-- The IMF has announced "a staff-level agreement" with Kyiv on assistance of $14 billion-$18 billion in conjunction with a reform program that will "unlock" up to $27 billion over the next two years, pending final approval next month. Tthe U.S. Congress has also passed an aid bill for Ukraine.

-- Ex-PM Yulia Tymoshenko has announced plans to run for president.

-- Members of the Right Sector have been holding a demonstration outside the Ukrainian parliament building to vent their anger at the killing of prominent member Oleksander Muzychko earlier in the week.

-- Six Ukrainian military officers detained by pro-Russian troops in Crimea have been released, including Colonel Yuliy Mamchur, but five others are still being held captive.

-- Anonymous sources quoted by CNN say U.S. intelligence "concludes it is more likely than previously thought that Russian forces will enter eastern Ukraine."

-- U.S. President Barack Obama, in the keynote speech of his visit to Europe, chided Russia for its use of "brute force" in Ukraine and vowed that a determined alliance of the United States and Europe will prevail over time.


*NOTE: Times are stated according to local time in Kyiv
17:35 24.3.2014
More vox pops from around our region. This time from the northern Kazakh city of Petropavl, also known by its Russian name of Petropavlovsk. Our Kazakh Service asked local residents if they thought Russia might attempt to absorb Kazakhstan's northern territories following the annexation of the Ukrainian region of Crimea.
Vox Pop: Northern Kazakhstan Residents On Possibility Of Joining Russia
please wait

No media source currently available

0:00 0:01:31 0:00
17:24 24.3.2014
Nix future tense in previous update. Russian agencies say Russian Foreign Minister Lavrov and acting Ukrainian Foreign Minister Deshchytsya have already met on the sidelines of the nuclear summit in The Hague. Details to follow.
16:48 24.3.2014
16:35 24.3.2014

Remember a few weeks ago when Arseniy Yatsenyuk alleged the Yanukovych regime had stolen $70 billion from state coffers? A new article by Christopher Miller in the "Kyiv Post" shows how just a portion of that was done, and how it was used.

The article cites prosecutors as alleging that Serhiy Kurchenko, Ukraine's youngest billionaire, ran a criminal ring that siphoned off nearly $100 million from state companies and used the money to pay thousands of Berkut riot police and titushki, or hired thugs, to crack down on Euromaidan protesters.

The heads of several government ministries are alleged to have been members of the Kurchenko ring.

Kurchenko, the owner of the VETEK energy conglomerate and Kharkiv's Metalist football club, as well as the publisher of "Forbes" magazine in Ukraine, is on an international wanted list for embezzlement. He has fled Ukraine and is believed to be living in Russia.

Read the entire article HERE:
16:07 24.3.2014
16:00 24.3.2014
15:58 24.3.2014
15:53 24.3.2014
15:53 24.3.2014
From the wires. Russia's Foreign Ministry has imposed sanctions on 12 Canadian politicians and the president of the Canadian-Ukrainian congress in response to sanctions the Canadian government imposed on 14 Russian citizens and a Russian bank.
Russia's Foreign Ministry released the list Monday that included advisors to Prime Minister, members of Canada's parliament and Paul Grod, the president of the Canadian-Ukrainian Congress, all of whom are now prohibited from entering Russian territory.

Russia's Foreign Minister said sanctions were being imposed on the 13 in retaliation for the Canada's sanctions against Russia. Canada imposed its sanctions after Russia annexed Crimea from Ukraine.

Canadian media has noted Canada has the third largest population of ethnic Ukrainians and was the first Western power to recognize Ukraine's independence after the collapse of the Soviet Union.
15:04 24.3.2014

Server error

Oops, as you can see, this is not what we wanted to show you!

This URL has been sent to our support web team to look into it immediately. Our apologies.

Please use Search above to see if you can find it elsewhere


A grainy recording has been posted on YouTube that appears to catch Yulia Tymoshenko using salty language and calling for all Russians remaining on Ukrainian territory to be killed with an atomic weapon.

The publisher, "Sergiy Vechirko," alleges the call took place on March 18 -- two days after Crimea's referendum calling for reunification with Russia. He also identifies the speakers as Tymoshenko and the former deputy secretary of Ukraine's National Security and Defense Council, Nestor Shufrych.

As Shufrych bemoans the state of affairs in Crimea, Tymoshenko brusquely cuts him off, saying, "Screw it, we should take up arms and kill the goddamned katsaps" -- a derogatory word for Russians -- "along with their leader."

She adds, "I'm sorry I'm not there right now -- there's no way they would have gotten Crimea away from me."

Shufrych goes on to say that a mutual acquaintance, "Viktor," asked what Kyiv should do about the 8 million Russians still living on Ukrainian territory.

"We should hit them with an atomic weapon," Tymoshenko answers back.

Tymoshenko has ackowledged on Twitter that the phone call was real but that the content was edited to appear virulently anti-Russian. Regarding the 8 million Russians, Tymoshenko claims her actual statement was "Russians in Ukraine are Ukrainians themselves." She added: "Hi FSB.: )"

The sudden appearance of the recording YouTube is reminiscent of last month's scandal in which two high-level diplomatic calls were recorded and leaked on social media, including one in which Assistant U.S. Secretary of State Victoria Nuland was caught saying, "F**k the EU."

Tymoshenko's disclaimers aside, the video is certain to play into Russia's hands by further amplifying the notion that Ukraine's ethnic Russians are in imminent danger of attack.

Load more

XS
SM
MD
LG