Ukrainian Prime Minister resigns
The vote came only hours
after Prime Minister Mykola Azarov announced he had submitted his
resignation in a bid to ease the situation.
Televised images from a
special session of parliament showed that an overwhelming majority voted
to overturn the legislation, with two lawmakers voting against the
repeal. Communist Party lawmakers abstained from the vote.
The laws were rammed
through parliament on January 16 by a show of hands by members of
President Viktor Yanukovych's Party of Regions.
Anger about the
legislation escalated long-running anti-government protests into violent
confrontations, with police and protesters fighting pitched battles in
the icy streets of the capital, Kiev.
Parliament is now looking
at legislation that might provide amnesty for more than 200 people
arrested since the demonstrations began in late November.
Activists say they want to see wide-ranging constitutional reform and a shake-up of the Ukrainian political system.
Azarov's resignation is
intended to "create more opportunities for social and political
compromise for a peaceful settlement of the conflict," a statement
posted on the government's website said.
That conflict "is a
threat to the entire Ukrainian society and every citizen," Azarov said,
adding that the government was doing all it could to prevent bloodshed.
But there is no word yet on whether Yanukovych has accepted the resignation.
And it's not clear how
far Azarov's departure would go to satisfy the demands of protesters
who, despite the cold and threat of violence, have massed in and around
central Kiev's Independence Square, or Maidan, to demand Yanukovych's
ouster and new elections. In recent days, protests have also
spread to
other cities around the country.
Klitschko: 'Stop repression'
Vitali Klitschko, leader
of the opposition Ukrainian Democratic Alliance for Reforms party, or
UDAR, told reporters he believed Azarov had submitted his resignation to
avoid liability over the current situation.
"It is important to stop
repression, which has burst out across the country by authorities when
people are unreasonably thrown in jail. We must put an end to it. We
will use any platform to defend the interests of people, either at a
parliamentary tribune or in the streets," Klitschko said, according to
his party's website.
Azarov's resignation may have been a case of jumping before he was pushed.
He was widely expected
to face a vote of no confidence in his government at the special
parliamentary session, and his post had already been offered to an
opposition leader.
Arseniy Yatsenyuk, who
heads the Fatherland Party, refused Yanukovych's offer to be prime
minister, but Azarov's position was made very difficult.
Speaking in parliament
Tuesday, Yatsenyuk urged the President to sign the law repealing the
anti-protest legislation as soon as possible, according to the official
Ukrinform news agency.
"I'm asking Viktor
Yanukovych to immediately sign a law for which the parliament has just
voted," he said. "We have finally closed the shameful practice of voting
by a show of hands and abolished those laws against which the whole of
Ukraine rebelled."
State of emergency threatened
Another round of talks was held Monday between the government and the opposition as they sought a resolution to the crisis.
Justice Minister Olena
Lukash said late Monday that the anti-protest laws passed on January 16
would be repealed and the protesters who occupied her ministry would
receive amnesty -- as long as they cleared out of "all seized premises
and roads."
Anti-government
demonstrators had seized the Justice Ministry building Sunday night but
cleared out Monday after Lukash threatened to impose a state of
emergency.
Opposition spokeswoman Lesya Orobets warned that such a step could lead to the use of military units to suppress protests.
The European Union's
foreign policy chief, Catherine Ashton, who is expected to arrive late
Tuesday in Kiev in a bid to defuse the crisis, also urged the government
not to impose a state of emergency.
The move "would trigger a
further downward spiral for Ukraine, which would benefit no one," she
said in a written statement late Monday.
"What is urgently needed
is a genuine dialogue to build a new consensus on the way forward,"
Ashton said. "I hope that the Ukrainian parliament will set a clear path
during tomorrow's session towards a political solution. This must
include revoking the package of laws passed on 16 January."
Ashton will travel to
Kiev after attending a long-planned "Russia summit" in Brussels,
Belgium, with Russian President Vladimir Putin, her spokesman, Michael
Mann, said Tuesday.
European Commission
President Jose Manuel Barroso and European Council President Herman Van
Rompuy are also taking part in the summit. It's expected to last about
2½ hours, shorter than originally planned, Mann said.
There have been tensions
between Russia and the European Union over developments in Ukraine,
with each side accusing the other of interference.
U.S. Vice President Joe
Biden called Yanukovych on Monday night to reiterate American support
for "a peaceful, political solution to the crisis," the White House
said.
Government offer rejected
Ukraine, a former Soviet
republic, is home to 45 million people. The clashes over the past 10
days are an escalation of weeks of largely peaceful public protests
prompted by Yanukovych's decision in November to spurn a planned trade
deal with the European Union and turn toward Russia instead.
The mass protests have galvanized the opposition parties challenging Yanukovych and his government.
Klitschko, a former
heavyweight boxing champion, said Sunday that he had rejected the post
of deputy prime minister on humanitarian issues.
His announcement was
greeted by loud cheers from the crowd, but his UDAR party said it was
ready to continue negotiations with the government.
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