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Ukrainian acting Prime Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk (right) welcomes U.S. Vice President Joe Biden before their meeting in Kyiv today.
Ukrainian acting Prime Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk (right) welcomes U.S. Vice President Joe Biden before their meeting in Kyiv today.

Live Blog: Ukraine In Crisis (Archive)

11:46 4.4.2014
Breaking comments from Yatsenyuk:

-- "The biggest disaster of this century would be the resurrection of the Soviet Union."

-- Ukraine sticking to unpopular austerity measures "as the price of independence."

-- Ukraine will never recognize Crimean takeover in return for good relations with Russia.

-- It is difficult "under current Russian presence" to undo "crime" of seizing Crimea.
11:41 4.4.2014
Ripples: RSF says crackdown on pro-Euromaidan demonstrations in Uzbekistan violates state constitution.
11:33 4.4.2014
11:30 4.4.2014
​Rival demonstrators have gathered outside the city administration building in Odesa as local lawmakers gather to discuss the fate of the city's acting mayor, Oleh Brindak.

RFE/RL's Ukrainian Service reports that 1,000 protesters are standing on the city's Duma Square, separated by a police cordon. Euromaidan protesters are calling for Brindak's ouster, while Antimaidan demonstrators are demanding he hold the post and that Russian be restored as a second state language.

You can watch a live feed of the protests here:
11:19 4.4.2014
From our newsroom:
Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov is due to hold talks in Moscow today with his Moldovan counterpart, Natalia Gherman. The talks are likely to focus on the situation in Transdniester amid Russian claims that the Moscow-backed separatist region, which is sandwiched between Moldova proper and Ukraine, is facing a "blockade." Lavrov earlier this week said Moscow "is worried over the steps taken by the current Ukrainian leaders concerning the freedom of movement." NATO's top military official, U.S. Air Force General Philip Breedlove, last month warned of a possible Russian incursion across Ukraine to occupy Transdniester. Transdniester declared independence from Moldova in 1990. The two sides fought a brief war in 1992 that ended when the Russian military intervened on the side of Transdniester.
10:50 4.4.2014
The World Bank has suggested that Ukrainian GDP could grow 3 percent in 2015 if its economy is reformed and stabilized, Reuters reports.
10:40 4.4.2014
AP has news of Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu's televised remarks today:
All the Ukrainian servicemen stationed in Crimea were allowed to leave for mainland Ukraine but 8,000 military men stayed and applied for permission to join the Russian army, Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu said in televised comments on Friday.

Russia annexed the Black Sea peninsula in March after Crimea residents voted overwhelmingly to seek to join Russia. The referendum was called two weeks earlier, coinciding with the military occupation of the region by armed men in unmarked uniforms.

Shoigu on Friday described claims that the Russian army has mistreated Ukrainian servicemen as "improper and provocative." Several senior Ukrainian officers including a military base commander were briefly detained by the Russian forces and kept in custody for several days.

Moscow has never admitted that the thousands of troops roaming the peninsula, seizing the airports and putting up road blocks were in fact Russian. They wore no markings but some of them drove APCs with Russian number plates.

In what seems to be a cautious acknowledgment of the Russian military involvement in the peninsula, Shoigu said that Crimea faced "a threat to civilian lives and the threat of a seizure of the Russian military infrastructure by extremist organizations," so Russia "took decisive actions" and "beefed up security of Russian military infrastructure in Crimea."

He stopped short, however, of giving details but said the military "managed to prevent bloodshed."

Shoigu said Russia's actions did not violate any international laws because Russia never exceeded the agreed amount of troops stationed on the peninsula.
10:31 4.4.2014
09:47 4.4.2014
The leader of Russia's ultranationalist Liberal Democratic Party, Vladimir Zhirinovsky, follows the McDonald's closure in Crimea by saying "the closure of McDonald’s restaurants in Crimea is a good thing; it would be great if it shut down all its restaurants in Russia."

After McDonald's, he added, "we'll deal with Pepsi-Cola."
09:19 4.4.2014

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