Ukrainians to Yanukovich, Putin: "Let My People Go" !

Kondor3

Cafeteria Centrist
Jul 29, 2009
33,566
9,630
1,340
Illinois, USA
Lenin statue toppled in huge Ukraine protest

600


Ukrainians break a monument of Vladimir Lenin during massive demonstrations in central Kiev, Ukraine, on Sunday. (Efrem Lukatsky / Associated Press / December 8, 2013)

By Victoria Butenko and Sergei L. Loiko - December 8, 2013, 10:08 a.m. - via the LA Times

KIEV, Ukraine — Protesters toppled a monument to Bolshevik leader Vladimir Lenin on Sunday during the biggest march and rally in central Kiev since President Viktor Yanukovich galvanized his opposition by turning down a trade deal with the European Union.

The Ukrainian protesters blocked and barricaded government offices and said they were giving Yanukovich 48 hours to disband his government before they would march on his country residence near Kiev.

In turning down the trade deal with the EU, Yanukovich was effectively asserting that Russia remained Ukraine's key trade partner. The country is politically and geographically divided, to some extent, between those who favor ties to Russia and those who would like to see Ukraine more aligned with Western Europe.

That gave the toppling of the Lenin statue particular significance — despite the fact that most Lenin statues in Russia itself were torn down during the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991. Statues of the Soviet leader were once ubiquitous throughout the East bloc.

No police officers could be seen anywhere in the vicinity of Taras Shevchenko boulevard where the granite and marble monument was brought down by a group of young protesters.

“It is amazing how the authorities allowed Lenin to go down!” said Sergei Andriyenko, a 51-year-old Kiev businessman who applauded the action. “Where were the police, where were the communists who were always protecting him?”

A young man climbed the empty base of the statue Sunday evening and was brandishing a Ukraine national flag as a crowd of several hundred young protesters chanted “Way to go!” and some young men crushed the fallen communist idol with sledgehammers.

The protests Sunday were the largest since the 2005 Orange Revolution in Ukraine. Although crowd estimates varied widely — from an official police estimate of 50,000 to rally organizers' claims of up to 1 million — the turnout seemed clearly larger than for a demonstration the previous Sunday that was officially calculated at 300,000.

...

Opposition leaders were also warning their followers that the Yanukovich administration might try to introduce a state of emergency.

“We are officially addressing President Viktor Yanukovich: attempts to declare a state of emergency are nothing but a state coup,” opposition leader Arseny Yatsenyuk told reporters at a briefing Sunday.

...


Another foe of the president, Sergei Pashinsky, told reporters that if Yanukovich doesn't dissolve his government within 48 hours, the opposition will send groups of protesters to block his country residence. Yanukovich was reportedly staying there after returning from a meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin in Sochi, Russia, over the weekend.

Yanukovich had no public response Sunday but a lawmaker from his party warned that the authorities are ready to take resolute actions.

...

[IMG]http://www.latimes.com/world/worldnow/la-fg-wn-lenin-statue-toppled-ukraine-protest-20131208,0,1343881.story#axzz2muZ3v0HJ[/IMG]

========================================

Where's Yulia Tymoshenko when ya need 'er, eh?

Vladimir_Putin_and_Yulia_Tymoshenko-1.jpg


Oh, that's right, the Ukrainian Government locked her up on some corruption charge or another and threw away the key.

Perhaps the Ukrainians need to split their country into a West Ukraine and East Ukraine?

The West could join Europe, like it wants to so desperately, and the East can stay tucked-in with the Russians, like they want to.

Not that that is ever likely to happen...

But those folks are in a quandry, and up in arms again, and the repercussions may possibly be felt throughout much of Europe - especially Eastern Europe - as well as the Black Sea region.

Not to mention impacting relations between the EU and Russia, and, by extension or related developments, between NATO and Russia, or the US and Russia.

The Russians are probably leaning pretty hard on the current Ukrainian President, who, himself, may be more of a tool of Moscow than anything else.

It has oftentimes been this way, between Ukraine and Russia... stretching far back into time... to the days of the earliest Czars, at least...

With the Russians telling the Ukrainians... stray too far, and we will stomp on you.

Lord knows the Russians have done just that to the Ukrainians often enough, over time.

This Ukrainian Protests (and Riots?) business has been dragging on for a week or more already, since the Ukrainian Government rejected the treaty with the EU, and it seems to be getting worse.
 
Last edited:
Lenin Beheaded

December 9, 2013 by Vladimir Tismaneanu

lenint-450x300.jpg


...

The nature of EU is not the point of the demonstrations. Ukrainians want to belong to the West, not to the East. They refuse Putin’s Eurasian mythologies as another camouflage for Russian hegemonism. EU has many problems, but the Ukrainians see it as a chance to escape a geopolitical fatality that has plagued their history for centuries. Before we minimize or discard their European dreams, let’s try to understand them.

For Ukrainians, Russia means oppression, humiliation, bondage. Others feel the same way. This explains why Georgia’s former president Mikhail Saakashvili and Moldova’s former prime minister Vlad Filat went to Kiev to spell out their solidarity with the protesters.

There are instances when euphoria needs to be understood, not condemned. When some leftist prophets irresponsibly proclaim the need “to retest the Bolshevik hypothesis”, (e.g. Slavoj Zizek), a morally outrageous and intellectually ludicrous statement, Ukrainian citizens get rid of the abhorred Bolshevik monuments. This type of action needs to be welcomed and supported.

Lenin Beheaded | FrontPage Magazine
 
131209111721-01-ukraine-1209-horizontal-gallery.jpg


Deep freeze fails to deter pro-Western demonstrators in Kiev, Ukraine

By Diana Magnay, Ben Brumfield and Victoria Butenko, CNN
updated 8:16 PM EST, Tue December 10, 2013

Kiev, Ukraine (CNN) -- Arctic temperatures are not enough to cool pro-Western demonstrators' anger at Ukraine's pro-Russian president.

Thousands of them refused to budge from Kiev's snow-covered streets, while the European Union's top diplomat made her way there to try to thaw the tensions.

Security forces in riot gear tried to herd demonstrators away from government buildings but avoided a hard-nosed crackdown.

That could be the result of pressure the West has put on President Viktor Yanukovych in the past two days.

U.S. Vice President Joe Biden called Yanukovych on Monday to urge him to talk with the opposition and avoid violence. European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso phoned on Sunday, as did U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, who asked Yanukovych not to use brute force against protesters.

...

Deep freeze fails to deter pro-West demonstrators in Kiev, Ukraine - CNN.com
 
Putin vs. Pro-West Ukrainians

December 10, 2013 by Arnold Ahlert

r.jpg


The massively attended Sunday protest in Kiev, highlighted by the toppling and smashing of the monument to Vladimir Lenin, has apparently forced Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych’s hand. Yesterday, he called for talks with former government leaders and opposition forces aimed at resolving the nation’s political crisis. It is a crisis ignited by his decision to turn away from Europe and feed Russian strongman Vladimir Putin’s dreams of a Eurasian Union, which is little more than a thinly-veiled effort to restore Russian hegemony over large swaths of Eastern Europe.

The current standoff is reminiscent of the Orange Revolution that took place in 2004, when a pro-democratic government was swept into power. Thus it was hardly surprising when government officials announced on Sunday that they would undertake an investigation against opposition leaders they accuse of attempting to seize power, and warned demonstrators that they could also be subjected to criminal charges. That investigation will be conducted by the Ukrainian security service SBU, formerly known as the KGB.

...

Putin vs. Pro-West Ukrainians | FrontPage Magazine


21August1968CzechInv.jpg
 
Last edited:

Forum List

Back
Top