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DEMOCRACY
Violence in Kiev 'completely outrageous': White House
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) Feb 19, 2014


Ukraine president replaces army chief
Kiev (AFP) Feb 19, 2014 - Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych on Wednesday replaced the head of the army's general staff after announcing a new "anti-terror" operation in response to the country's deadliest violence since its post-Soviet independence.

A brief presidential statement said Yanukovych was appointing Yuri Iliin in place of Volodymyr Zamana to head the powerful post but provided no explanation for the decision.

Zamana was known to have publically disagreed with Yanukovych at the start of the month when the embattled Ukrainian leader first considered imposing a state of emergency in response to the wave of pro-EU protests gripping Kiev and other parts of the country.

The ousted army chief said on February 1 that "no one had the right to use the armed forces to restrict the rights of citizens" -- a statement that won him wide praise in the protest movement.

The 51-year-old Iliin had until now served as the head of Ukraine's navy. He has stayed out of the public limelight during Ukraine's three-month political crisis but is viewed as a strong Yanukovych loyalist.

Yanukovych had earlier on Wednesday announced that he was launching an "anti-terror" operation in response to a night of clashes between thousands of protesters and riot police that left at least 26 people dead.

It was not immediately clear when the operation would enter into force. It grants that army the right to detain suspects and hand them over for questioning to prosecutors and the police.

The White House on Wednesday called the deadly violence on the streets of the Ukrainian capital "completely outrageous" and renewed its appeal to President Viktor Yanukovych to de-escalate the situation.

Clashes in Kiev between police and anti-government protesters that have claimed 26 lives are "completely outrageous" and "have no place in the 21st century," Deputy National Security Advisor Ben Rhodes told reporters aboard Air Force One.

"The fact of the matter is we have made very clear to the Ukrainian government that it is their responsibility to allow for people (to) protest," Rhodes said.

"We consistently oppose any of the violence by all sides, but the responsibility is on the government to pull back its riot police, to call a truce and to engage in a meaningful discussion with the opposition about the way forward."

President Barack Obama was expected to comment on Ukraine later Wednesday during a trip to Toluca, Mexico, for a North American leaders summit, Rhodes said.

The close Obama advisor also warned of possible sanctions.

"We've made clear that we consider taking action against individuals who are responsible for acts of violence within Ukraine," he said.

"We have a toolkit for doing that that includes sanctions."

The Pentagon for its part called on Ukraine's army to stay out of the conflict and warned that if it intervened, Washington would review ties to the country's military.

"The Department of Defense is encouraged that the Ukrainian armed forces have not been brought into this crisis," spokesman Colonel Steven Warren told reporters.

"We urge them to remain on the sidelines. Participation would have consequences on our defense relationship," he said.

In a conversation with his Ukrainian counterpart in December, Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel urged the armed forces to exercise "restraint," Warren said.

The US government requested more than $100 million in aid for Ukraine for fiscal year 2013, including $1.9 million for military training and $7 million to finance the purchase of American-made weapons and equipment, according to the Congressional Research Service.

The overnight bloodshed came after some three months of mostly peaceful protests, which broke out after Yanukovych ditched a pact with the European Union in favor of closer ties with former Soviet master Russia.

On Tuesday, US Vice President Joe Biden called Yanukovych to express Washington's "grave concern" regarding the crisis, saying government forces that stormed a protest camp on Kiev's Independence Square, or Maidan, should withdraw.

The White House said Biden made clear in the call that the United States condemned violence by any side, "but that the government bears special responsibility to de-escalate the situation."

US lawmakers also voiced dismay at the violence.

Republican Senator Marco Rubio, a potential 2016 presidential candidate, urged the Obama administration "to use every diplomatic means at its disposal, including sanctions, to bring accountability to those involved in acts of violence throughout Ukraine."

Senate Democrat Chuck Schumer called the violence "unacceptable," adding on Twitter that "the Ukrainian people deserve freedom of speech and assembly."

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DEMOCRACY
EU, NATO deplore escalation of violence in Kiev
Brussels (AFP) Feb 18, 2014
The European Union and NATO deplored Tuesday's deadly protests in Kiev, where at least five people were killed and scores hurt in clashes between protesters and police. EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton said she was "deeply worried about the grave new escalation", saying in a statement that she condemned "all use of violence, including against public or party buildings." NATO chie ... read more


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