Accessibility links

Breaking News
Ukrainian acting Prime Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk (right) welcomes U.S. Vice President Joe Biden before their meeting in Kyiv today.
Ukrainian acting Prime Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk (right) welcomes U.S. Vice President Joe Biden before their meeting in Kyiv today.

Live Blog: Ukraine In Crisis (Archive)

12:37 11.4.2014
Meanwhile, according to RFE/RL's sources, there could be some big diplomatic moves afoot in Vienna:
The Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) is hosting a meeting of the Russian and Ukrainian delegations of the OSCE Parliamentary Assembly in Vienna.

A source with knowledge of the meeting told RFE/RL that a Russian delegation led by OSCE Parliamentary Assembly member Nikolai Kovalev and a Ukrainian delegation led by member Oleh Zarubinskiy would meet today to initiate a dialogue.

The source said the two delegations would be joined later by members of the OSCE Parliamentary Assembly from other countries.

The meeting between the two delegations follows a visit to Moscow and Kyiv the previous week by OSCE Parliamentary Assembly President Ranko Krivokapic.
12:24 11.4.2014
Our news desk has some more details of Yatsenyuk's meeting with regional leaders in Donetsk today:
Ukrainian Prime Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk has said in Donetsk that the country's regions should have more powers and be allowed to hold referendums on important issues.

Yatsenyuk met in Donetsk with regional leaders today but not with protesters who are occupying a regional administration building in central Donetsk and have declared the formation of a sovereign "Donetsk People's Republic."

Yatsenyuk called on the separatists -- who have built large barricades -- to vacate the building and surrender their weapons.

He said he opposes the use of force in recovering the building, as was done in Kharkiv earlier this week in flushing out separatists from a government facility in that eastern Ukrainian city.

Protesters stormed several government buildings in Kharkiv, Donetsk, and Luhansk on April 6.

Only the building in Kharkiv has been cleared of separatists.

Yatsenyuk also called for regional government leaders in Ukraine to be elected instead of being appointed by the national government in Kyiv.

Ukraine's influential oligarch Rinat Akhmetov was one of those who met with Yatsenyuk in Donetsk.

In his view, the ongoing crisis in the eastern Ukrainian city can only be solved via dialogue.

Akhmetov, a billionaire Donetsk native of Tatar origin, told Yatsenyuk that he would always support the Donetsk region as a part of Ukraine.

But he said he also supports the protesters, who demand more regional rights and state-language status for Russian.


12:21 11.4.2014
12:19 11.4.2014
12:18 11.4.2014
11:39 11.4.2014
Here's a little more from our news desk on NATO's claims regarding the Russian troop buildup on the Ukrainian border:
NATO says it stands by the satellite images it released that it says show a massive Russian troop buildup along Ukraine's eastern border with Russia.

NATO's Supreme Headquarters Allied Powers Europe (SHAPE) said in a statement today that the images are accurate and it has released more images of the same area.

Russian officials disputed the images after they were released on April 10, claiming they were of military exercises from August 2013.

SHAPE says the images are accurate and were taken between late March and early April 2014.

It said it is firm in its assessment that there are some 35,000-40,000 Russian troops near the Ukrainian border.

NATO Secretary-General Anders Fogh Rasmussen in Sofia today that Russia must withdraw its troops from the border region and begin a "sincere" dialogue with the West.
11:32 11.4.2014
RFE/RL's Glenn Kates has just issued a pretty amazing story about some Russian TV stations' rather "confused" reporting from Ukraine:

Meet Andrei Petkhov. Actually, make that Petkov.

He emigrated to Germany some 20 years ago but traveled to the southern Ukrainian city of Mykolaiv recently to act as a mercenary organizing against pro-Russian protesters.

Wait, check that. It seems the 40-year-old is a local pro-Russian patriot who "as per the usual" went to Mykolaiv's central square to peacefully protest the "radical" government in Kyiv.

So who is Petk(h)ov? That depends on whether you're watching the Russian state-run NTV or the state-run Rossia 1 channel...

Is Petk(h)ov a man with a split personality disorder? Was he separated at birth from an identical twin? Or maybe he's just a jobbing actor taking whatever work come his way? Find out more here.
11:10 11.4.2014
11:04 11.4.2014
Our news desk is reporting that Russia is taking steps to get an international arrest warrant issued for a prominent member of Right Sector:

Russian Prosecutor-General Yury Chaika said his office has sent Interpol materials for the arrest of Ukrainian Right Sector leader Dmytro Yarosh.

Chaika told reporters in the Crimean city of Simferopol on April 11 that Russia's Investigative Committee has filed a criminal case, in absentia, against Yarosh for making public calls for carrying out acts of extremism and terrorism.

Chaika also said Russia would not hand-over former Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych since "information available to us suggests that he has not committed any crimes, hence there are no reasons to extradite him."

Chaika said, on the other hand, that "there are scores of questions for the new [Ukrainian] authorities," adding, "a whole succession of crimes was committed and they should be investigated," without specifying what crimes he meant.
10:58 11.4.2014
Russia Foundation chair David Clark has written a thought-provoking opinion piece for CNN on how Moscow's new assertiveness may have shaky foundations:
Economic data suggests that the Russian economy may have contracted in the first quarter of 2014. Since the start of the year, net capital outflows of up to $70 billion have already exceeded the total for 2013, according to Reuters.

To make matters worse, Putin's threat to seize Western assets in the event that sanctions are expanded has turned Russia into a major investment risk at a time when it urgently needs to attract foreign capital and technology to upgrade infrastructure and create a broader base for economic growth.

It would be a mistake to see these problems as the short-term effect of the diplomatic turbulence over Ukraine.

In reality they are the culmination of serious structural problems that have been ignored and in many case made worse by Putin's lurch towards authoritarian statism.

Load more

XS
SM
MD
LG