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Ukraine pro-West parties hold coalition talks

Published: 28 Oct 2014 - 12:03 am | Last Updated: 20 Jan 2022 - 03:50 pm

KIEV: The pro-Western winners of Ukraine’s parliamentary poll were negotiating the formation of a ruling coalition yesterday, but fighting with pro-Russian insurgents highlighted the obstacles to their promises of peace and close ties to the European Union.
The day after pro-Western and moderate nationalist forces backing President Petro Poroshenko scored a big win in Sunday’s election, the hard work of coalition building began.
Results with 60 percent of precincts reporting showed Prime Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk’s People’s Front and the Petro Poroshenko Bloc neck and neck with about 22 percent of votes each. Expectations were that the pair would form a government, with Yatsenyuk keeping his premier’s post.
A draft deal could be released by the end of Monday, said Yuriy Lutsenko from the Poroshenko Bloc, Interfax-Ukraine news agency reported.
Russia welcomed the outcome as backing for “a peaceful resolution” of the separatist war, while the head of the EU executive, Jose Manuel Barroso, called the election a “victory of democracy and European reforms”.
Observers from the pan-European OSCE group said the election, held in challenging conditions, “largely upheld democratic commitments”.
But in a fiery reminder of the hurdles Poroshenko faces, an election-period lull in the rebel-held east ended early Monday in a barrage of artillery fire.
Dozens of rockets fired by pro-Russian insurgents could be heard blasting from the city of Donetsk towards a nearby Ukrainian military base.
More shelling was reported near the government-held coastal city of Mariupol, while military authorities reported the deaths of two soldiers in a rebel attack on Sunday near Lugansk.
Kiev and its Western backers see the six-month uprising, and the March annexation by Russian troops of Crimea, as an attempt by Russian President Vladimir Putin to cripple Ukraine.
But Moscow says it is simply coming to the aid of Russian speakers who feel threatened by Ukraine’s lurch toward the West.
In response, the United States and European Union have imposed damaging economic sanctions on Moscow, fuelling the kind of East-West tensions last seen in the Cold War.
Sunday’s election was meant to finalise a revolution that began in February, when huge street protests ousted Moscow-backed president Viktor Yanukovych after he abruptly rejected a landmark EU pact.
AFP