friday, 28 march of 2014

Ukraine: UN condemns Crimea vote as IMF and US back loans

Ukraine

UN condemns Crimea vote as IMF and US back loans


The UN General Assembly has approved a resolution describing the Moscow-backed referendum that led to Russia's annexation of Crimea as illegal.


It comes after the International Monetary Fund (IMF) agreed to a loan deal with Ukraine worth $14-18bn.


The US Congress also passed legislation on Thursday backing a $1bn loan guarantee for Ukraine.


Tensions are high between Russia and the West after pro-Russian troops annexed Ukraine's southern peninsula.


The West has widely condemned the move, with US President Barack Obama warning on Wednesday of "deeper" EU and US sanctions against Russia if it carried out further incursions in Ukraine.


Non-binding


One hundred countries voted in favour of approving a UN General Assembly resolution declaring the Crimean referendum on 16 March illegal and affirming Ukraine's territorial integrity.


Eleven nations voted against, with 58 abstentions.


"This support has come from all corners of the world which shows that this (is) not only a regional matter but a global one,'' Ukraine's Foreign Minister Andriy Deshchytsia told reporters after the vote.


But Russia's ambassador to the UN, Vitaly Churkin, said "the fact that almost half" of the UN General Assembly members had not supported the resolution was "a very encouraging trend and I think this trend will become stronger and stronger".


Given that the resolution was non-binding, the vote was largely symbolic, says the BBC's Nick Bryant in New York.


But Ukraine hopes the resolution will act as a deterrent and dissuade Moscow from making further incursions into its territory, he adds.


President Obama said the IMF announcement, which would unlock a further $10bn in loans for Ukraine, was a "major step forward" to help stabilise the country's economy and meet the long-term needs of its people.


Speaking after talks with Italian Prime Minister Matteo Renzi in Rome on Thursday, Mr Obama said it was a "concrete signal" that the world stood united with Ukraine at a difficult time.


A bill was also passed in the US Senate and House of Representatives on Thursday providing $1bn in loan guarantees aimed at stabilising Ukraine's economy. The measure still needs to be signed into law by President Obama.


Ukraine's interim Prime Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk had earlier told parliament the country was on the ""on the edge of economic and financial bankruptcy".


'Door of diplomacy'


On Thursday evening, some 2,000 protesters belonging to the far-right nationalist group, Right Sector, gathered outside the Ukrainian parliament in Kiev demanding the resignation of Interior Minister Arsen Avakov.


They blame Mr Avakov for the death of one of the group's leaders, Oleksandr Muzychko, in an arrest operation earlier this week.


A BBC correspondent at the scene described the crowd's mood as aggressive, with MPs urging them to move away from the premises through loudspeakers.


The protesters smashed several windows and vowed to return on Friday morning before retreating, the AFP news agency reports.


Meanwhile, former Prime Minister Yulia Tymoshenko earlier announced she planned to run for president of Ukraine in the elections expected to take place on 25 May.


Ms Tymoshenko, who has already served twice as prime minister and ran for president in 2010, said she would stand as "a candidate for Ukrainian unity".


She was released after serving three years in jail on corruption charges, following the ousting of pro-Russian President Viktor Yanukovych in February.


More than 100 people were killed during protests which overthrew pro-Kremlin President Yanukovych in February.


(Published by BBC News – March 27, 2014)

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