KIEV: European Union mediators resumed efforts in Ukraine yesterday to secure the release from jail of opposition leader Yulia Tymoshenko as the clock ticks down to the signing of landmark trade accords at the end of the month.
The agreements on association and free trade, due to be signed at an EU-Ukraine summit on November 28 in the Lithuanian capital Vilnius, offer the former Soviet republic of 46 million people the chance of an historic shift west away from Russia.
But signature hinges on freedom for ex-prime minister Tymoshenko, a fierce opponent of President Viktor Yanukovych. She was jailed in 2011 for seven years for abuse of office after a trial which the EU says was political.
Irish politician Pat Cox and former Polish President Aleksander Kwasniewski, who have been shuttling between Brussels and Kiev for more than 18 months on a mission to nail down a deal over Tymoshenko, went straight into meetings with officials after arriving in Kiev yesterday, EU sources said.
They are due to meet Yanukovych and opposition members and are likely to visit Tymoshenko in the northern town of Kharkiv, where she is receiving hospital treatment under prison guard.
Before their arrival, Yanukovych, whose pro-Europe course has upset Russia, Ukraine’s biggest trade partner, told a regional economic forum the Vilnius accords would mark “the beginning of a process of broader and deeper integration”.
He made no specific reference to Tymoshenko or the efforts to reach a compromise on her case.
EU foreign ministers are due at a pre-summit meeting on November 18 to assess whether Kiev has met key democratic criteria to allow for the signing to go ahead.
The EU mediators are focusing their attention on a compromise under which Tymoshenko, 52, can travel to Germany to receive treatment for spinal problems.
The Ukrainian parliament is now haggling over the wording of a draft law that would allow her to travel abroad — the crux being whether she goes as a free person or as a convicted criminal.
REUTERS