The Australian – AFP, July 25, 2014
Ukrainian Prime Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk has announced his resignation. Source: AP |
UKRAINE’S
prime minister has resigned after his governing coalition collapsed, plunging
the country into political limbo and threatening further to complicate the
investigation into the downing of Malaysian Airlines flight MH17 last week.
The shock
announcement added to an already chaotic situation in the country’s
rebel-controlled east, where international experts are carrying out a complex
investigation into the Mh17 tragedy that left 298 dead.
The gravity
of the situation facing the country was underscored by allegations from
Washington that the US has evidence Russian troops are firing artillery on
Ukrainian military positions from Russian soil.
Prime
Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk said he was stepping down over the “dissolution of
the parliamentary coalition and the blocking of government initiatives” after
several parties walked out on the ruling group.
The
collapse of the ruling coalition paves the way for early elections to be called
by President Petro Poroshenko within 30 days.
Although a
truce has been declared by both rebels and government forces in the immediate
vicinity of the vast crash site, heavy shelling was ongoing nearby including
around Donetsk, just 60km from the scene.
Observers
said that a fragile truce between the two sides ended as the victims’ bodies
were removed from the site, with intense fighting resuming almost immediately.
Ukraine’s
army reported four soldiers killed over the last 24 hours in its offensive to
retake the eastern industrial heartland from the rebel militias.
Countries
which lost 298 citizens in the disaster are looking to deploy armed police to
secure the impact zone, with the Netherlands joining Australia in announcing
plans to send unarmed police to secure the crash site. Dutch Prime Minister
Mark Rutte has said the Netherlands would send 40 police to the site, while
Tony Abbott last night announced that 50 Australian Federal Police officers
were on standby in London to help secure the site and search for victims.
“On the
site it is still clear that nothing is happening without the approval of the
armed rebels who brought the plane down in the first place,” said Mr Abbott.
“There has
still not been anything like a thorough professional search of the area where
the plane went down, and there can’t be while the site is controlled by armed
men with vested interest in the outcome of the investigation,” he added.
The
Ukrainian military said rockets were on Thursday being fired “from the Russian
side,” hitting locations close to Lugansk airport and in several areas in the
Donetsk region.
Mortar
shells also rained down on Avdiyika in the Donetsk region, the army said,
without giving details of casualties.
Kiev said
two fighter jets that were downed on Wednesday were hit by missiles launched
from Russian territory, and that while the pilots ejected safely, there was no
information about their whereabouts.
Meanwhile,
the Red Cross warned both sides to abide by the Geneva Conventions, declaring
that it considered Ukraine to be in a state of civil war.
In
Washington, State Department spokeswoman Marie Harf warned that Moscow was
planning to deliver “heavier and more powerful multiple rocket launchers” to
the pro-Russian separatist forces in Ukraine.
“They’re
firing artillery from within Russia to attack Ukrainian military,” Ms Harf told
reporters.
The EU,
which accuses Russia of fanning the rebellion in Ukraine’s east by arming the
separatists, will add 15 Ukrainian and Russian individuals and 18 entities to
its sanctions list, said a source from the bloc.
The move
came just a week after the EU unveiled a round of toughened embargoes against
Moscow, which is widely expected to sink into recession this year.
In the
debate over more sanctions, Britain clashed with France over its push for an EU
arms embargo, with Paris intent on going ahead with its plan to sell two
warships to Russia.
On
Thursday, Mr Poroshenko said he was “very disappointed” at France’s insistence
on the deal, saying: “It’s not a question of money, industry or jobs. It’s a
question of values.”
US
intelligence officials have said they believe the rebels mistakenly shot down
the Malaysia Airlines flight from Amsterdam to Kuala Lumpur with a surface-to-air
missile provided by Russia.
Moscow has
denied the charges and Putin has pledged to “do everything” to influence the
separatists and ensure a full probe into the crash.
Russia has
continued a troop build-up near the Ukraine border and kept up deliveries of
arms and equipment to separatists since the downing of the Malaysian airliner,
according to US defence officials.
The first
bodies from the crash arrived in the Netherlands on Wednesday to a solemn
ceremony. Dozens more were flown there on Thursday to undergo an identification
process that Rutte has warned could take months.
Dutch
police have also been visiting bereaved relatives of the victims to retrieve
DNA samples from items such as hairbrushes, and obtain details of tattoos and
fingerprints, as well as consulting medical and dental records to help with the
identification.
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