17:03
19.5.2014
17:49
19.5.2014
Worth a read re Yanukovych's decision to flee RT @Interpreter_Mag Yanukovych ally talks presidential election, Tym... http://t.co/BwBeymfKHr
— Will Vernon (@BBCWillVernon) May 19, 2014
17:55
19.5.2014
At the HQ of the #Donetsk People's Republic. Catching up on the news. #ukraine #maidan pic.twitter.com/JuI1rOQ2w7
— Tim Sullivan (@SullivanTimAP) May 19, 2014
18:40
19.5.2014
Crazy video. #Ukraine Army leaves tank on street; random guy gets in & manages to fire cannon. http://t.co/PbCMdgx5sV pic.twitter.com/jVdLSdPzTh
— Jim Roberts (@nycjim) May 19, 2014
19:21
19.5.2014
Barring any dramatic developments, we're now closing the live blog for today. Before we go, we'll leave you with this space-related update from our news desk:
NASA chief Charles Bolden has told reporters in Berlin that the International Space Station (ISS) can continue functioning without Russia.
Bolden was responding to recent comments made by Russian Deputy Prime Minister Dmitry Rogozin on May 13 that Russia does not intend to use the ISS after 2020 and that the American segment of the ISS could cannot exist without the Russian segment.
Bolden said today that, even if Russia withdrew from the ISS, no participating nation "is indispensable on the International Space Station."
Bolden pointed out that the ISS is jointly run by the United States, Russia, Japan, Europe, and Canada. He also said that NASA expects private companies to start transporting astronauts to the station by 2017.
Amid tensions between Moscow and Washington over the Ukraine crisis, Rogozin said Russia was concerned about continuing high-tech projects with "an unreliable partner" that is "politicizing everything."
Bolden was responding to recent comments made by Russian Deputy Prime Minister Dmitry Rogozin on May 13 that Russia does not intend to use the ISS after 2020 and that the American segment of the ISS could cannot exist without the Russian segment.
Bolden said today that, even if Russia withdrew from the ISS, no participating nation "is indispensable on the International Space Station."
Bolden pointed out that the ISS is jointly run by the United States, Russia, Japan, Europe, and Canada. He also said that NASA expects private companies to start transporting astronauts to the station by 2017.
Amid tensions between Moscow and Washington over the Ukraine crisis, Rogozin said Russia was concerned about continuing high-tech projects with "an unreliable partner" that is "politicizing everything."
05:55
20.5.2014
From our newsroom this morning:
Reports from Russia say Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu has told troops to return to their permanent bases after spring military exercises near the border with Ukraine.
Shoigu's action comes one day after Russian news agencies said President Vladimir Putin had also ordered Russian forces near Ukraine back to their bases.
But NATO and the United States have said they'd seen no signs of any pullback since then.
Moscow has failed to carry out such promises before.
Russia has massed what NATO says are 40,000 soldiers near its border regions with Ukraine, where pro Russian separatists in the country's east have declared independent states.
Kyiv and its Western allies fear the Russian troops could be used to invade in support of the rebels following Moscow's annexation of the Ukrainian region of Crimea in March.
Shoigu's action comes one day after Russian news agencies said President Vladimir Putin had also ordered Russian forces near Ukraine back to their bases.
But NATO and the United States have said they'd seen no signs of any pullback since then.
Moscow has failed to carry out such promises before.
Russia has massed what NATO says are 40,000 soldiers near its border regions with Ukraine, where pro Russian separatists in the country's east have declared independent states.
Kyiv and its Western allies fear the Russian troops could be used to invade in support of the rebels following Moscow's annexation of the Ukrainian region of Crimea in March.
06:12
20.5.2014
Kremlin propaganda chief Dmitry Kiselyov scoffs at the notion that there was anything sinister in Rossiya 1 TV's use of old footage from the North Caucasus to illustrate a detailed account alleging a civilian was killed by pro-Kyiv forces to send a message to pro-Russians.
It was simply a "random error" or maybe "a mistake in a computer or a young nymph editor," according to Kiselyov, the head of Russia's newly reorganized information agency, Rossiya Segodnya.
...and at the same time denies having seen the footage:
Here's our own Carl Schreck's report exposing the news program's video sleight of hand, which was published as part of RFE/RL's ongoing #UkraineUnspun series:
It was simply a "random error" or maybe "a mistake in a computer or a young nymph editor," according to Kiselyov, the head of Russia's newly reorganized information agency, Rossiya Segodnya.
...and at the same time denies having seen the footage:
Here's our own Carl Schreck's report exposing the news program's video sleight of hand, which was published as part of RFE/RL's ongoing #UkraineUnspun series:
06:17
20.5.2014
06:31
20.5.2014
Russian Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev suggested in a Bloomberg Television interview that "[w]e are slowly but surely moving toward a second Cold War, which no one needs."
When asked, Medvedev declined to provide any assurance that Russia would not incorporate the Donetsk or Luhansk regions of Ukraine, where pro-Russia separatists put on hastily organized referendums on independence and subsequently asked to be annexed by Russia, the agency reported.
He said progress in relations with the United States achieved under his presidency (2008-2012) "are now being reduced to zero."
06:33
20.5.2014
On the gas front, in the same Bloomberg Television interview, Medvedev suggested the Ukrainian government must present a timetable for settling its multibillion-dollar gas debt and make a “substantial” initial payment.