A protester prepares to throw a Molotov cocktail during clashes with
police in central Kiev, Ukraine, Wednesday, Jan. 22, 2014. Two people
whose dead bodies were found Wednesday near the site of clashes with
police have been shot with live ammunition, prosecutors said Wednesday,
an announcement that could further fuel violence that spilled on the
streets of the Ukrainian capital after two months of largely peaceful
protests.(AP Photo/Evgeny Feldman)
Over the past week shocking pictures have emerged from the Ukraine's capital, Kiev.
Plumes of black smoke billow over the city, fires rage in the
scorched skeletons of cars, and hundreds have been wounded, with two
confirmed dead. Hordes of riot police are on the streets and the EU's
justice chief has said the country is sliding towards civil war. Unless
you've been following the events from the beginning it's difficult to
glean why tensions are now strained to breaking point. Here's the
basics.
Why are people protesting?
It's been going on for two months.
In November President Viktor Yanukovych decided to pull out of a treaty
with EU, an agreement many felt would have paved the way for the
Ukraine to join the union. It looked like he was going to sign the
agreement before performing a U-turn, which has made Ukrainian
disappointment
all the sharper. However the government would rather stay
friendly with Putin in return for favourable treatment. The protesters
think it would benefit ordinary people far more to be aligned with the
EU and consider Yanukovych a man who only represents the interests of
the richest.
If this was in November, why is it making headlines now?
Most
recently tensions spilled over in violence after Yanukovych introduced
new anti-protest laws designed to end the demonstrations. The laws
banned protests from taking place without the government’s permission
and threatened those who disobeyed with up to ten years in prison. The
legislation also introduced hefty fines for wearing masks or helmets to
demonstrations, as well as driving bans for convoys of more than five
cars. Internet media outlets have to register with authorities and no
amplifiers are allowed in public places. Many people feel the government
is trying to repress the truth and remove their rights. This protest is
now more than a pro-EU movement, it is fuelled by anti-government
feeling, with many activists seeing their cause as a fight against
corruption. Demonstrators are demanding the resignation of Prime
Minister and Interior Minister, and also the resignation of President
Viktor Yanukovych.
What does Vitali Klitschko have to do with it?
The former
heavyweight boxing champion is one of three opposition leaders and is
strongly in favour of the EU. The other two leaders are Oleh Tyahnybok,
and Arseniy Yatsenyuk, of jailed former prime minister Yulia
Tymoshenko's party. Writing in The Independent, Chatham House fellow
James Sherr thinks Klitschko is a real contender to be the next leader
and offer a political solution to the crisis. However he also thinks
things are going to get worse before they get better.
Where are all the flames coming from?
A line of burning tyres
marks the barricade between protesters and police. Among the
demonstrators are radical nationalists, some of whom have been pictured
hurling Molotov cocktails and petrol bombs at riot police. Two activists
have been killed by gunshot wounds, but officers deny responsibility. A
third activist has been found dead in a forest outside Kiev, reportedly
showing signs of torture. A 17-year-old student told the BBC he was
stripped naked by police, beaten, slashed with knives and cut across his
anus. He was eventually taken to hospital. Earlier this week ministry
apologised after video footage emerged showing police humiliating a
protester in custody, making him walk around naked in the snow.
Allegations of torture are going to be raised by Ukrainian MP Irena Seh,
the BBC reports.
Who are the Berkut?
The Berkut are a special unit of officers
attached to the Interior Ministry and their purpose is to control large
crowds. They are known for their brutality and at least one Ukrainian
private TV station, ICTV, has openly criticised riot police for their
actions toward protesters. Amnesty has called for a investigation into
allegations of abusive use of force by officers from the Berkut riot
police force during the break up of a riot in November.
What is ‘the Maidan’?
The Square of Independence or Maidan
Nezalezhnosti is the centre of the protests. It has long been the focus
of political protests, of which the latest has been dubbed the
‘Euromaidan’. The automaidan is where supporters stop their cars in a
circle, forming a barricade. Maidan means square.
What next?
There are fears that the riots could spread beyond
Kiev, with protesters reportedly besieging or stormed government
buildings in at least four cities in western Ukraine on Friday. European
Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso warned Mr Yanukovych in a
phone call on Thursday that the European Union may take action if he
doesn’t end his crackdown on protesters, and ambassadors have discussed
the possibility of sanctions. President Yanukovych has called an
emergency session of parliament next week to discuss the protests.
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