Saakashvili vows to march to Maidan on Sunday:
By RFE/RL
Mikheil Saakashvili, who was freed from police custody shortly after law enforcement authorities raided his apartment in Kyiv last week, is calling on Ukrainians to demonstrate in the center of the capital on December 10.
In a Facebook post late on December 7, Saakashvili told supporters he had lost his voice and was running a temperature but would "be by your side again" at a midday march to Kyiv's Maidan Nezalezhnosti, or Independence Square, on Sunday.
Saakashvili -- the former Georgian president who became governor of Ukraine's Odesa region in 2015 but quit a year later and is now a vocal opponent of President Petro Poroshenko -- thanked backers for their support in the tumult of recent days.
Law enforcement officers searched Saakashvili's apartment in Kyiv on December 5, dragged him off the roof, and bundled him into a car. But supporters blocked the streets and pulled him from the vehicle, and he led a march to parliament.
Police raided a protest tent camp near parliament early on December 6, but Saakashvili was not detained and a 24-hour deadline for him to turn himself in passed without visible action by the authorities.
Ukrainian officials have accused Saakashvili of abetting an alleged "criminal group" led by former Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukoych -- who was pushed from power in 2014 by protests on Independence Square and fled to Russia -- and have suggested that his protests are part of a Russian plot against Ukraine.
Saakashvili -- a Kremlin foe who Russian leaders accuse of provoking the five-day war between Moscow and Tbilisi in 2008, when he was Georgian president -- has dismissed the claims.
The search of Saakashvili's home was conducted two days after his Movement of New Forces party organized a rally in Kyiv calling for Poroshenko's impeachment and for legislation that would allow it to take place.
Here's an item from our news desk:
Poroshenko Denies Interfering With Ukraine's Anticorruption Efforts
Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko says he has not interfered in the work of state anticorruption agencies, comments that come amid mounting domestic and foreign pressure over Kyiv’s commitment to combating graft.
Poroshenko's remarks to reporters on December 8 following a meeting with Lithuanian President Dalia Grybauskaite come in the wake of accusations by critics this week that the government is trying to torpedo anticorruption efforts.
"Over more than 2.5 years of the activity of anticorruption bodies, everyone, including the leadership of these bodies, stated that there had never been an interference in the activities of these bodies on the part of the president," Poroshenko said in Vilnius, according to a transcript posted on his website.
He was speaking a day after activists and reformist lawmakers managed to derail parliamentary consideration of a bill -- authored by lawmakers from Poroshenko's party and that of former Prime Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk -- that would see the head of Ukraine's National Anticorruption Bureau (NABU) removed.
The International Monetary Fund, the World Bank, and United States this week voiced concerned about Ukraine's willingness to tackle graft.
Poroshenko said in Vilnius on December 8 that he would "not allow any threats of political interference in the activities of anticorruption institutions."