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Watching and Waiting

DW staff (nda)April 12, 2007

Rival demonstrators rallied in the Ukrainian capital Wednesday as defiant Prime Minister Viktor Yanukovych rejected a possible concession by his political enemy, President Viktor Yushchenko.

https://p.dw.com/p/AEfZ
The lines of division have been drawn in Ukraine's current political crisisImage: AP

Yushchenko issued a decree last week to dissolve parliament and hold elections on May 27 after accusing the ruling majority led by Yanukovych of abusing the constitution.

Yanukovych is defying the order and hundreds of his supporters have camped outside government buildings in Kiev for more than a week, with thousands more holding daily rallies in the capital.

According to a top Yushchenko aide, security council head Vitaly Gaiduk, the president "does not exclude that the decree could be suspended," thereby delaying the holding of new elections.

However, Yanukovych fired back, telling demonstrators he would only agree to new legislative elections if they "take place alongside early presidential elections" -- a condition that pro-Western Yushchenko has previously refused to consider.

Nation divided into two opposing camps

Ukraine Demonstration in Kiew Viktor Janukowitsch Anhänger
Yanukovych supporters chant anti-Yushchenko slogansImage: AP

Several thousand supporters of Yanukovych rallied on Independence Square, many waving the blue-and-white flags of his Russian-backed Regions Party. Thousands of Yushchenko supporters demonstrated on Europe Square nearby.

"The presidential decree is unconstitutional. That's not my president and his party is against the people," Georgy Yershov, a 70-year-old pensioner from Dnipropetrovsk in eastern Ukraine, said at the anti-Yushchenko rally.

At the pro-presidential rally, demonstrators held up placards reading: "Honest Court, Honest Elections," "East and West Together" and "No to the Criminals in Power!"

"We're here to support the president and his decision... There is a lot of pressure against the judges. We want to say: do not be afraid, we are with you," said Nadya Kryvonos, a local deputy from Kremenchug in central Ukraine.

Political enemies stoking fires of feud

Yushchenko und Yanukovych
The two Viktors continue their struggle for powerImage: AP

Yushchenko and Yanukovych have feuded since 2004, when the Orange Revolution protests brought Yushchenko to power after a presidential election win initially handed to Yanukovych was declared fraudulent.

On Wednesday, former Polish president Aleksander Kwasniewski, who played a key role as a mediator in the Orange Revolution, held talks with Yanukovych and other top Ukrainian officials.

"Russia and Poland have expressed their readiness to be international mediators," Olexander Chaly, deputy head of the presidential administration, told reporters.

Yushchenko cancelled a scheduled trip to address the Council of Europe in Strasbourg on the political crisis, instead sending his foreign Minister, Arseny Yatsenyuk, officials said.

A delegation of Russian parliamentarians also met deputies from the Yanukovych-led governing coalition and voiced their support for the ruling majority's stand against the president.

Ukraine must break deadlock, says EU

EU Ukraine Javier Solana bei Viktor Juschtschenko in Kiew
EU on the sidelines: Solana and Co. are staying outImage: AP

Meanwhile, the European Parliament warned EU institutions not to get involved in Ukraine's political crisis until its own people have had a chance to tackle the issues themselves.

"All resources in Ukraine should be used to solve the problem," Marek Siwiec, the deputy chairman of the European Parliament, said. Only after the Ukrainian Constitutional Court has ruled on the legality President Yushchenko's dissolution of a parliament order "can we see whether there is space for European involvement," he added.

"Members of the court cannot escape their responsibility," Siwiec said. "I believe Ukrainian democracy is able to solve the problem using a word which is not popular, but useful: compromise."

Siwiec told a news conference in Kiev that, unlike in 2004 when Yushchenko won strong, unequivocal Western support, this time neither side could expect special treatment.

"All parties have a legal and democratic mandate now," he said. "That's a huge difference."

Court decision expected next week

Staatsflagge und Staatswappen auf dem Gebäude des Außenministeriums der Ukraine in Kiew
The court will rule on the dissolution of parliamentImage: DW

The constitutional court, which is made up of 18 judges, has been asked by Yanukovych to rule on the legality of the presidential decree and a decision is expected within weeks, experts said.

On Tuesday, the court announced that it would not start examining the case until April 17. Meanwhile, five judges from the court, three of them Yushchenko appointees, said they were being put under undue political pressure.

The Sevodnya daily said the constitutional court's decision to delay examining the case played into the hands of Yushchenko by "cutting off the retreat for the governing coalition."

Party lists for elections on May 27 would have to be prepared by April 17.