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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
13:33 14.3.2014
13:35 14.3.2014
More on the regional diplomatic front from the agencies.

British Prime Minister David Cameron has spoken with Kazakh President Nursultan Nazarbaev about the crisis in Ukraine.

The Kazakh presidential office said the talk on Friday was initiated by London. According to Nazarbaev's office, Cameron and Nazarbaev agreed that the crisis "must be resolved by peaceful means and through reinstatement of all basic norms of international legislation in Ukraine."

Earlier this week, Nazarbaev talked by telephone with U.S. President Barack Obama and German Chancellor Angela Merkel.

The White House said Obama and Nazarbaev had reiterated the importance of finding a diplomatic solution while ensuring Ukraine's territorial integrity.

Nazarbaev also spoke with Russian President Vladimir Putin earlier this week during which Nazarbaev expressed support for Moscow's position in defending the rights of national minorities in Ukraine.
13:39 14.3.2014
Russia is now adding a legal component to its strong criticism of what it says is the right-wing makeup of Ukraine's new authorities.

Russia's Investigative Committee has launched a criminal investigation into the leader of Ukraine's nationalist Svoboda (Liberty) party, Oleh Tyahnybok.

The committee's spokesman, Vladimir Markin, said Friday that Tyahnybok is suspected of fighting Russian forces in the North Caucasus on the side of Chechen separatists in the 1994-95 war.

Markin added that the Investigative Committee's North Caucasus branch had collected enough evidence to charge Tyahnybok and several members of his party with organizing an illegal armed gang and using force against Russian federal troops.

According to Markin, arrest warrants for Tyahnybok and his associates will be issued soon. Tyahnybok is a member of the Ukrainian parliament. He was one of the leaders of antigovernment protests in Kyiv that toppled President Viktor Yanukovych in late February.
13:55 14.3.2014
13:58 14.3.2014
In Kyiv, EU flag now flying in front of Ukrainian Parliament. In Simferopol, meanwhile, Ukrainian trident has been replaced with Russian flag.
14:03 14.3.2014

Former Ukrainian Defense Ministery Anatoliy Hrytsenko says his son, Automaidan founder Oleksiy Hrytsenko, has been kidnapped along with two other Automaidan activists in Simferopol.
15:15 14.3.2014
This is from RFE/RL's newsdesk:

Three Automaidan activists have reportedly gone missing in Crimea.

Ukrainian lawmaker and former Defense Minister Anatoliy Hrytsenko wrote on Facebook today that his son Oleksiy Hrytsenko and two other activists, Natalya Lukyanchenko and Serhiy Suprun, informed their relatives by phone that they were chased by unknown people and tried to hide in the building of the Mejlis -- Crimean Tatars' self-governing body in Simferopol -- yesterday evening.

Their phones have not been responding since then. Anatoliy Hrytsenko said the mobile monitoring system indicates that the three activists are currently in the premises of the Military Commission Office in Simferopol recently taken over by pro-Russian forces.

However, Hrytsenko said the Military Commission Office's security personnel denied the activists' presence in the building.
15:31 14.3.2014
This just in from the wires:

Crimea's pro-Kremlin Prime Minister Sergey Aksyonov has said the region could become part of Russia within a year of its referendum on the issue tomorrow.

Aksyonov told a news conference today in the region's capital, Simferopol, that Crimea should not become independent, but "enter Russia as its constituent entity."

He said that "the transitional period will last for about a year."

The pro-Moscow leader also called on Russian-speaking eastern regions of Ukraine to hold their own referendums on switching over to Kremlin rule. (AFP, Interfax, ITAR-TASS)
15:41 14.3.2014
Buzzfeed provides the captions for Lavrov and Kerry's day:
15:43 14.3.2014
An update regarding last night's fatality in Donetsk:

Russia's Foreign Ministry says violence in eastern Ukraine overnight demonstrates that authorities in Kyiv are losing control and that Russia reserves the right to protect its citizens.

In a statement issued today, the ministry said radical right-wing groups attacked peaceful protesters who were rallying against the "destructive positions of people who call themselves the Ukrainian authorities."

Organizers of the pro-EU rally said the man who was stabbed to death in the violence was from their group.

In a reference to Russia, Donetsk Governor Serhiy Taruta told journalists that "a lot of people concentrated there who were not from Ukraine

Taruta also said the Russian statement "distorts the real situation."

ALSO READ: This Russian Foreign Ministry Statement On Donetsk Death Defies Reality

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