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No power to pardon Tymoshenko: President

Published: 01 Sep 2013 - 03:33 am | Last Updated: 17 Feb 2022 - 04:13 am

KIEV: Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovich said he had no legal powers to allow jailed rival Yulia Tymoshenko to go abroad for medical treatment as some European governments have urged, but hinted compromise might be found if the law was changed.

The European Union says agreements on association and free trade with Ukraine could be in jeopardy if Yanukovich does not free former prime minister Tymoshenko, his fiercest opponent, who was jailed in 2011. The EU says her trial for abuse of office was political.

With the signing of these agreements set for November, the Tymoshenko issue is coming to a head even as Russia, Ukraine’s biggest single trading partner, piles pressure on Kiev to halt its drive towards Europe and join a Russia-led Customs Union.

In an attempt to end the deadlock over Tymoshenko, European envoys have sought to persuade Yanukovich to pardon her so she can go to Germany for treatment for chronic back trouble.  

Replying to a question on Tymoshenko in a television interview on Friday, Yanukovich, however, said: “Unfortunately, in Ukraine, nobody has such authority, including the president ... Our laws do not allow for such circumstances”. Hinting at possible changes to legislation, he said: “The law would have to be changed so that someone would be provided with the authority to do this.”

He said most political forces in parliament would “unite” to solve outstanding problems relating to European integration and he was optimistic that Kiev would meet criteria laid down by the EU for signing the agreements at a summit in Vilnius, Lithuania.

These so-called benchmarks for democratic progress relate to reforming the judiciary, ending politically motivated prosecutions and improving electoral legislation.

“Demands for the signing of association ... were put to Ukraine and we are working on them, putting the finishing touches, we might say. A final full-stop will be written this autumn. We will fulfil all the conditions. I have no doubt of this,” he told 1+1 television channel.

But many diplomats say it is unlikely the agreements will be signed unless Yanukovich relaxes his stance on Tymoshenko.

Kiev has stuck to its aspiration of joining the European mainstream and turning away from its former Soviet master, but Yanukovich has not shown any inclination to free Tymoshenko.

She is his strongest political opponent and could doom his chances of re-election for a second term in 2015 if she became political active again.

Even as the Kiev government seeks to persuade the EU that Ukraine is a fit partner for the future, it has come under  pressure to back-track from Russia, which fears a flood of highly competitive goods on the Russian market if Ukraine joins an EU free trade zone.

Prime Minister Mykola Azarov on Wednesday urged Moscow to accept the “reality” of a changing world after Russia conducted extra customs checks on Ukrainian imports.

Reuters