Senators
McCain, Murphy join massive Ukraine anti-government protest, threaten sanctions
U.S. Senators John McCain and Chris Murphy
joined around 200,000 anti-government protesters in the central square of
Ukraine's capital Sunday, threatening sanctions against the government of
President Viktor Yanukovych if authorities use more violence to disperse
demonstrators.
Anti-government protesters have set up an
extensive tent camp in Kiev and erected barricades of snow hardened with
freezing water and studded with scrap wood and other junk.
McCain, R-Ariz., and Murphy, D-Conn., joined
the anti-government demonstration to express support for them and their
European ambitions. The protests began Nov. 21 after Yanukovych announced he
was backing away from signing a long-awaited agreement to deepen trade and
political ties with the EU and instead focus on Russia, and have grown in size
and intensity after two violent police dispersals.
"We are here to support your just cause,
the sovereign right of Ukraine to determine its own destiny freely and
independently. And the destiny you seek lies in Europe," McCain said
during a speech, according to Reuters.
"We ... want to make it clear to Russia
and Vladimir Putin that interference in the affairs of Ukraine is not
acceptable to the United States,” he added.
McCain and Murphy told reporters after the
rally that sanctions were possible and "that there will be consequences to
our relationship if there is any more violence on the streets of Kiev."
But the rally was shadowed by suggestions that
their goal of closer ties with Europe may be imperiled.
A much smaller demonstration of government
supporters, about 15,000, was taking place about less than a mile away from
Kiev's Independence Square.
In the face of the protests, which present a
serious challenge to Yanukovych's leadership, Ukrainian officials this week
renewed talks with the EU agreement and promised that they would sign the deal
once some issues are worked out.
However, the EU's top official on expansion
issues, Stefan Fuele, cast doubt on the prospect Sunday, saying on his Twitter
account that work is "on hold" and that the words and actions of
Yanukovych and his government are "further and further apart."
Yanukovych backed off the agreement on the
grounds that the EU was not providing adequate compensation to his economically
struggling nation for potential trades losses with Russia. Russia, which for
centuries controlled or exerted heavy influence on Ukraine, wants the country
to join a customs union, analogous to the EU, which also includes Belarus and
Kazakhstan.
The opposition says that union would
effectively reconstitute the Soviet Union and remain suspicious that Yanukovych
might agree to it when he meets Russian President Vladimir Putin on Tuesday.
Arseniy Yatsenyk, a top opposition leader,
warned Yanukovych against making such a move.
"If the agreement is signed, he can
remain in Moscow and not return to Kiev," Yatsenyuk told the crowd at the
protest on Independence Square, also known as the Maidan.
Yuri Lutsenko, another opposition politician
and former interior minister, told the protesters they were fighting for
Ukraine's independence.
"What is happening on the Maidan today?
It is an anticolonial revolution," he said. "Above all, Ukrainians
turned out to say to Moscow: 'We are no longer under your command, we are an
independent country."
The mood was starkly different at the smaller
pro-government rally across town. Many people from eastern Ukraine, the
country's industrial heartland and Yanukovych's support base, are against the
protesters in Kiev and want the country to have closer economic ties with
Russia.
"We'll become the slaves of Europe if we
go into it," said 43-year-old demonstrator Segei Antonovich. "Look at
history — only union with Russia can save Ukraine from catastrophe."
Over the past week, Ukrainian officials have
made some steps toward the opposition, with Yanukovych proposing an amnesty for
demonstrators arrested in the police break-ups of protests and suspending two
senior officials under investigation for the violence
The opposition, however, is holding to
stronger demands, including the resignation of the government and early
elections for both president and parliament.
McCain suggested those moves may not be enough
to end the crisis, referring to the suspended officials.
"At least some people have been held
responsible," he told reporters. "Whether they are responsible or not
is not clear."

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