13:56
12.3.2014
Interesting: Kyiv architecture chief Serhiy Tselovalnyk has announced that the reconstruction of Ukraine's Independence Square, badly damaged but also immortalized during the 3-month Euromaidan protests, will be determined by an international competition. This will include a discussion of which monuments will be placed in the square, as well as the possibility of creating a museum dedicated to the "heavenly hundreds" -- the victims of Euromaidan violence. Tselovalnyk says the first meeting related to the reconstruction will be held in a week.
14:55
12.3.2014
http://t.co/42Tkz1z87H Fumbling for words, #Russia-appointed prosecutor general of #Crimea vows to uphold...#Ukraine's laws. #CrimeaInvasion
— Ukrainian Updates (@Ukroblogger) March 12, 2014
15:02
12.3.2014
This just in from the wires:
The Polish prime minister says the European Union will probably sign the political part of its association agreement with Ukraine next week. Donald Tusk was speaking at a joint press conference with German Chancellor Angela Merkel. (Reuters, dpa)
The Polish prime minister says the European Union will probably sign the political part of its association agreement with Ukraine next week. Donald Tusk was speaking at a joint press conference with German Chancellor Angela Merkel. (Reuters, dpa)
15:38
12.3.2014
Here's some more detail about the Polish prime minister's statement on an EU association agreement with Ukraine:
Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk has said that the European Union and Ukraine could sign the political part of their association agreement at next week's EU summit.
Tusk was speaking at a joint press conference with German Chancellor Angela Merkel on March 12 after talks in Warsaw.
Merkel said the EU will impose tougher sanctions on Russia next week if there is no sign in the following days that Moscow is willing to engage in a "contact group" to seek a diplomatic solution for Ukraine.
Merkel said that, if no progress is made by Moscow, EU foreign ministers will draft sanctions such as visa bans and asset freezes on those responsible for Russia's actions against Ukraine.
EU leaders will discuss the proposed sanctions at their summit on March 20. (Reuters, dpa)
Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk has said that the European Union and Ukraine could sign the political part of their association agreement at next week's EU summit.
Tusk was speaking at a joint press conference with German Chancellor Angela Merkel on March 12 after talks in Warsaw.
Merkel said the EU will impose tougher sanctions on Russia next week if there is no sign in the following days that Moscow is willing to engage in a "contact group" to seek a diplomatic solution for Ukraine.
Merkel said that, if no progress is made by Moscow, EU foreign ministers will draft sanctions such as visa bans and asset freezes on those responsible for Russia's actions against Ukraine.
EU leaders will discuss the proposed sanctions at their summit on March 20. (Reuters, dpa)
15:53
12.3.2014
An odd report from LifeNews.ru about plans for an independence referendum in Kharkiv on Sunday. LifeNews is believed to be linked to Russia's Federal Security Service (FSB).
В Харькове на народном референдуме хотят собрать 3 млн голосов за независимость от Киева
15:54
12.3.2014
Lenta.ru main correspondent says he is quitting and others, too “@A3AP: на гореславского работать не буду, уверен не только я”
— Leonid Ragozin (@leonidragozin) March 12, 2014
16:25
12.3.2014
U.S. Senator John McCain comments on the Ukraine crisis during an interview today with RFE/RL's sister network VOA:
"There are a number of steps that Congress needs to take. One of them would be to impose sanctions on individuals, especially the oligarchs that are around [Russian President Vladimir] Putin who are responsible for [the death of Russian whistle-blower Sergei] Magnitsky, for other abuses of human rights, and corruption. We start our missile-defense systems in the Czech Republic and Poland, accelerate the path of Georgia and Moldova into NATO, and a number of other steps that we could take, which would then change, I think, hopefully, Putin's behavior.
"First and foremost understand Vladimir Putin for what he is. Stop saying: 'I'll be more flexible when I’m reelected.' Understand -- stop pushing the 'reset button.' Understand Putin for what he is: a KGB colonel apparatchik who said the worst disaster of the 20th century was the breakup of the Soviet Union."
On whether it would be effective for the U.S. to speed up the process of approving exports of liquefied natural gas (LNG) to reduced dependency on Russian energy sources:
"I think it would be very important but it's long term, were not going to get facilities to move natural gas immediately to Ukraine and to Germany and our European friends but we should embark on it now. But we shouldn't place too much hopes on that because it's going to take a while before we can do it. Putin tomorrow could cut off the gas."
16:55
12.3.2014
A report by the TV station Dozhd on reports of a Russian military convoy in the Russian region of Belgorod, about 20 kilometers from the Kharkiv region's border with Russia, and some 60 kilometers from the city of Kharkiv, Ukraine's second-largest city (population of about 1.47 million).
16:56
12.3.2014
Some more news in from the wires:
The veteran leader of the Crimean Tatars, Mustafa Jemilev, who is in on a visit to Moscow, has discussed the situation in Ukraine in a telephone conversation with Russian President Vladimir Putin.
The Russian president's press service said the two men had a lengthy talk on the situation in Ukraine's Crimea ahead of a scheduled referendum on March 16.
The Crimean Tatars' self-governing body, the Mejlis, does not recognize Crimea's new pro-Kremlin government which called the March 16 referendum on whether the region should break away from Ukraine and join Russia.
Jemilev, a former head of the Mejlis, told journalists that, in their telephone conversation, he urged the Russian leader to respect Ukraine's territorial integrity. (UNIAN, Interfax, ITAR-TASS)
The veteran leader of the Crimean Tatars, Mustafa Jemilev, who is in on a visit to Moscow, has discussed the situation in Ukraine in a telephone conversation with Russian President Vladimir Putin.
The Russian president's press service said the two men had a lengthy talk on the situation in Ukraine's Crimea ahead of a scheduled referendum on March 16.
The Crimean Tatars' self-governing body, the Mejlis, does not recognize Crimea's new pro-Kremlin government which called the March 16 referendum on whether the region should break away from Ukraine and join Russia.
Jemilev, a former head of the Mejlis, told journalists that, in their telephone conversation, he urged the Russian leader to respect Ukraine's territorial integrity. (UNIAN, Interfax, ITAR-TASS)
18:06
12.3.2014
More fallout at lenta.ru after the longtime editor in chief was forced to quit after linking to an article on a Right Sector leader.
I understand that pretty much every journo in lenta.ru has decided to quit after takeover by the Kremlin
— Leonid Ragozin (@leonidragozin) March 12, 2014