Beautiful clouds over Ukraine / – Video
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Beautiful clouds over Ukraine /
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By: Dima Oktarin
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Westerners Hunting For Wives In The Ukraine [Search For A Russian Bride] - Video
Russia accused of destabilizing Ukraine: Kremlin-backed activists declare regional independence
About a hundred pro-Russian protesters returned to the main regional administration building in eastern Ukrainian city of Kharkiv. Pro-Russian protesters als...
By: JewishNewsOne
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April 7, 2014: People gathered in front of a barricade at the regional administration building in Donetsk, Ukraine. (AP Photo/Andrey Basevych)
Ukraine's Interior Minister said Tuesday that pro-Russian demonstrators had been ejected from the regional administration building in the country's second-largest city, and approximately 70 of them had been arrested.
Arsen Avakov said on his Facebook page that an "anti-terrorist operation" was launched in the city of Kharkiv early Tuesday. He did not specify what forces took part. The Interfax news agency cited the head of the region, Igor Baluta, as saying it included police and soldiers.
The protesters were calling for a referendum on seceding from Ukraine. A similar demonstration took place in the city of Donetsk, with protesters also seized the administration building there and calling for a referendum.
Both cities are in Ukraine's east, where hostility is strong toward the government that took power in February after the ouster of Kremlin-friendly president Viktor Yanukovych. The Donetsk and Kharkiv regions and a third Russian-speaking city besieged by pro-Moscow activists over the weekend, Luhansk have a combined population of nearly 10 million out of Ukraine's 46 million, and account for the bulk of the country's industrial output.
Meanwhile, NATO Secretary General called on Russia to pull back troops from its border with Ukraine.
According to Reuters, Anders Fogh Rasmussen called the ongoing unrest in Ukraine "a great concern ... Any further move to eastern Ukraine would represent a serious escalation rather than de-escalation."
The Ukrainian government has accused Russia of stirring up the unrest. Moscow, which has tens of thousands of troops massed along the border, has rejected the allegation but has also sternly warned Ukraine against using force.
In Washington Monday, the U.S. said any move by Russia into eastern Ukraine would be a "very serious escalation" that could bring further sanctions. White House spokesman Jay Carney said there was strong evidence that some of the pro-Russian protesters were hired and were not local residents.
At the same time, the U.S. announced that Secretary of State John Kerry will meet with top diplomats from Russia, Ukraine and the European Union in a new push to ease tensions. The meeting, the first such four-way talks since the crisis erupted, will take place in the next 10 days, the State Department said.
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KIEV, Ukraine (AP) As top diplomats from Russia and the United States have met in Europe's capitals to decide Ukraine's fate in recent weeks, there's been a conspicuous absence: a representative from Ukraine.
Russia has refused to deal with Ukraine's new government since protests in February ousted the pro-Russian president. And while the West supports the fledgling leadership, it has left an impression that it's in charge of talks with the Kremlin.
Time and again through history, Ukraine has been caught in big power politics. Historians draw parallels between how Roosevelt, Churchill and Stalin divided Europe at Yalta after World War II trapping eastern European countries in the Soviet orbit. Now some Ukrainians fear history is repeating itself as they are shut out of negotiations and sit on the sidelines waiting for a verdict.
Ordinary Ukrainians are mostly grateful for Western efforts to mediate the crisis and more than anything are terrified by the prospect of war.
But officials have sought to stress that Ukraine's voice must be heard.
At a news conference last week, Ukrainian Deputy Foreign Minister Danylo Lubkivsky insisted that decisions regarding Ukraine's future must not be made without Kiev's input: "No real dialogue is possible without Ukraine," Lubkivsky said. That is why the announcement this week of high-level talks between the United States, the EU, Ukraine and Russia expected to take place in the next 10 days was met with hope in Kiev.
Despite angry rhetoric, the West has largely accepted the reality of Russia's takeover of Crimea. Diplomatic efforts are now focused on preventing Russia's military incursion into the Russian-speaking east and south of Ukraine, where Moscow claims it needs to protect Russian-speakers. With thousands of Russian troops amassed near the border with Ukraine, Moscow seeks to dictate conditions: It wants to turn Ukraine into a loose federation that it can control, and is pushing for Russian to become the second official state language, on par with Ukrainian.
Kiev has so far refused to cave to Moscow's demands as any step that dents Ukraine's hopes of integrating with the West will be met with fierce resistance from the Maidan, the pro-Western protest movement. More than 100 people were killed in the protesters' clashes with police.
But facing enormous military and economic pressure from Russia, there is little Ukraine can do on its own, some experts say so Kiev has to rely on Western patronage.
"During the Cold War, U.S. secretaries of state and Soviet foreign ministers routinely negotiated the outcome of crises and the fate of countries. It has been a long time since such talks have occurred, but last week a feeling of deja vu overcame me," George Freedman of Stratfor, a U.S. global intelligence think tank, wrote recently.
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