I/II.
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/06/08/world/europe/poroshenko-sworn-in-as-president-of-strife-torn-ukraine.html?hpw&rref=world&_r=1

Poroshenko Takes Ukraine Helm With Tough Words for Russia

By DAVID M. HERSZENHORN
<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/h/david_m_herszenhorn/index.html>JUNE
7, 2014


















KIEV, Ukraine -- Petro Oleksiyovych Poroshenko, a pro-European, billionaire
confectioner, was sworn in on Saturday as the fifth president of Ukraine,
promising to put an end to a separatist insurrection in the east that has
divided the country for months. He also expressed new resolve, saying
Ukraine would never accept Russia's annexation of Crimea, a point that he
made in a face-to-face meeting with President Vladimir V. Putin on Friday.

In a forceful inaugural address, Mr. Poroshenko called on rebel fighters in
eastern Ukraine to put down their weapons and he promised safe passage for
"Russian mercenaries" who wish to return home. But he said there would be
no negotiations with armed insurgents, raising the prospect of further
bloodshed as the military seeks to quash the rebellion.

While the United States and its Western allies expressed new hope of a
diplomatic resolution
<http://www.nytimes.com/2014/06/07/world/europe/obama-honors-moment-of-liberation-in-normandy.html>
after
meetings with Mr. Putin at a commemoration of the 70th anniversary of D-Day
in France, Russia's intentions in Ukraine remain unclear and there have
been mixed signals about the consensus among Western nations over further
sanctions should diplomatic efforts fail.
Mr. Poroshenko with the presidential mace during the ceremony on Saturday
in the Parliament hall in Kiev. CreditPool photo by Anastasia Sirotkina

Mr. Poroshenko, after being installed in a mostly solemn ceremony at the
Ukrainian Parliament, said he hoped to mend relations with Russian, noting,
"Citizens of Ukraine will never enjoy the beauty of peace unless we settle
down our relations with Russia."

At the same time, however, he voiced no willingness to tolerate recent
Russian aggression and the annexation of Crimea, which Mr. Putin has
described as the righting of a historical accident that separated the
peninsula from its Russian roots.

"Russia occupied Crimea, which was, is and will be Ukrainian soil," Mr.
Poroshenko told an audience that included Vice President Joseph R. Biden
Jr. and other international dignitaries. "Yesterday in the course of the
meeting in Normandy, I told this to President Putin: Crimea is Ukraine
soil. Period. There can be no compromise on the issues of Crimea, European
choice and state structure."

Mr. Poroshenko also said that he would move swiftly to sign political and
economic agreements with the European Union that Ukraine's former
government, under heavy Russian pressure, d backed away from in November,
setting off the civil unrest in Ukraine. "My pen is in my hands," he said,
adding later, "European democracy for me is the best form of government
invented by mankind."

In a sign of outreach, Russia returned its ambassador, Mikhail Y. Zurabov,
to Kiev to attend the inaugural festivities. Mr. Zurabov had been recalled
to Russia after Mr. Yanukovych's ouster.

And a day after President Obama demanded that Russia stop the flow of
weapons and fighters into Ukraine, Russian news agencies reported that Mr.
Putin had ordered tighter controls on the border to prevent people from
crossing illegally.

Still, violence continued to flare in the east. An assassination attempt on
Denis Pushilin, a pro-Russian, separatist leader in Donetsk, on Saturday
resulted in the shooting death of an assistant, Maksym Petruhin. Photos
carried by Ukrainian news sites showed Mr. Petruhin, wearing a business
suit, lying face down on a street alongside a parked car with at least
seven bullet holes in the rear door panel.

Mr. Poroshenko, 48, won the presidency in a landslide on May 25, in a
special election that was called after months of civil unrest that toppled
the former president, Viktor F. Yanukovych, who fled to Russia.

For many years, he served in the Parliament. He was foreign minister under
President Viktor A. Yushchenko and trade and economics minister under Mr.
Yanukovych.

He earned his fortune making chocolate, and Russia is a major market for
his company, Roshen, which has factories and other facilities there. His
deep business ties in Russia and his long experience in Ukrainian politics
had led to some hope that he could negotiate successfully with the Kremlin.

In his inaugural speech, however, he was resolute against Russian
intervention. "The issue of territorial integrity of Ukraine is not subject
to discussion," he said. "I have just sworn 'with all my deeds to protect
the sovereignty and independence of Ukraine' and I will always be faithful
to this sacred promise."

The inauguration ceremony was imbued with ritual. Mr. Poroshenko swore the
oath of office, with his hand on the 16th century Peresopnytsia Gospel. He
was presented with a bejeweled presidential necklace, which framed his tie
of sky blue and yellow, Ukraine's national colors. He was also given the
bulava, a scepter that is a historic symbol of power.

Mr. Poroshenko opened his speech by recognizing the so-called Heavenly
Hundred demonstrators who were killed in clashes with the police in Kiev in
the days before Mr. Yanukovych was forced from power.

"Many people thought that we got independence without any difficulty," he
said. "It is not true."

After calling for a moment of silence he turned his attention to the
pro-Russian violence in the east, and switched from speaking Ukrainian to
Russian.

He promised amnesty for fighters who put down their weapons and safe
passage for Russian insurgents who wish to go home. To the peaceful
citizens of eastern Ukraine, he said he would welcome dialogue.

He offered conciliatory actions, promising he would come to eastern Ukraine
"with peace, with a project of government decentralization, with a
guarantee of free usage of Russian language in your region, with the strong
intention not to divide people into right and wrong Ukrainians, with
respect for the specifics of regions, for the right of local communities to
their peculiarities in the issues of historic memory, pantheon of heroes,
religious traditions."

Mr. Poroshenko also promised a jobs program and to fight the corruption
that has plagued Ukraine throughout its post-Soviet history. He said he
would push for parliamentary elections later this year, aiming to meet a
demand of demonstrators, many still camping out in the center of Kiev, who
say that changing presidents was not sufficient.

He also acknowledged that the uprising had deeply altered the country. "The
victorious revolution of dignity not only changed the government," he said.
"The country has changed. People have changed."


II.
http://www.themoscowtimes.com/news/article/ukraine-shuts-down-8-checkpoints-on-russian-border/501647.html

Ukraine Shuts Down 8 Checkpoints on Russian Border

   - The Moscow Times
   - Jun. 06 2014 12:20
   - Last edited 12:20


Maxim Zmeyev / ReutersA view shows a checkpoint on the Ukrainian-Russian
border near the settlement of Uspenka in Donetsk region, Ukraine.

Ukraine has shut down several checkpoints on its Russian border in the
country's eastern Luhansk and Donetsk regions, where governmental forces
have been struggling to battle a separatist insurgency.

The Thursday evening decision to shut down eight checkpoints was taken
to "prevent threats to the population's life and health due to dangerous
events in certain regions," a statement on the Ukraine government website
said.

Pro-Russian rebels in Ukraine's east have conducted a string of successful
attacks on checkpoints in recent days, forcing Ukraine border guards
to abandon a 130-kilometer stretch of its border with Russia, former
Ukrainian Interior Minister Yury Lutsenko said Thursday on his Facebook
page.

Ukrainian border guard units lack the manpower and the heavy weaponry
available to insurgents to successfully oversee the 2,300-kilometer border
with Russia, newspaper Gazeta.ru wrote Friday, citing Ukrainian political
and military analysts.

Lutsenko and spokespeople for the Ukrainian Border Guard Service have
claimed rebels are receiving military support from the Russian side of the
border but Russian authorities have repeatedly denied the claims.
-- 
Peace Is Doable

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