Ukraine crisis: Turchynov warns of 'separatism' risk
Ukraine's
interim President Olexander Turchynov has warned of the dangers of
separatism following the ousting of President Viktor Yanukovych.
His comments came amid continuing opposition in Ukraine's Russian-speaking regions to the new administration in Kiev.The formation of a unity government has been delayed until Thursday.
Meanwhile there are reports that one of Mr Yanukovych's former aides, Andriy Kliuyev, has been shot and wounded.
Mr Kliuyev's car is said to have been attacked while he was travelling back to Kiev from the Crimea after tendering his resignation to the former president. A spokesman was quoted on local media as saying his life was not in danger.
Mr Kliuyev, the former head of the presidential administration, is said to have left Kiev with the president when he fled the capital at the weekend.
Addressing parliament, Mr Turchynov said he would meet law enforcement agencies to discuss the risk of separatism in regions with large ethnic Russian populations. Separatism was a "serious threat", he said.
The delay in announcing a unity government was to allow further consultations, Mr Turchynov said, adding that "a coalition of national faith must be elected".
Anyone held responsible for separatist moves should be punished, his press service quoted Mr Turchynov as saying in a later statement, the Reuters news agency reports.
Parliament has now voted in favour of trying Mr Yanukovych at the International Criminal Court (ICC).
The ex-president is accused of being behind the deaths of more than 100 protesters at the hands of the police, many of them shot by snipers.
The ICC is a court of last resort, our correspondent says - it will only try a case if the country concerned is genuinely unwilling or unable to do so.
In its resolution on trying Mr Yanukovych at the ICC, parliament said he had been involved in "serious crimes".
MPs also want former Interior Minister Vitali Zakharchenko and former Prosecutor-General Viktor Pshonka tried.
Mr Yanukovych has been missing since last week. He was last
reportedly seen on Sunday in Balaklava, on the Crimean peninsula. A
warrant has been issued for his arrest. 'Non-intervention' Russia has been vehemently opposed to the changes in Ukraine, with Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev saying on Monday that those behind the new administration had conducted an "armed mutiny".
At a news conference in Moscow on Tuesday, Mr Lavrov warned other states against seeking "unilateral advantages" in Ukraine, but said Russia's "policy of non-intervention" would continue.
"It is dangerous and counterproductive to try to force on Ukraine a choice according to the principle of either being with us or against us," he said.
Mr Lavrov added that "it is in our interest for Ukraine to be part of the broad European family" but against Russia's interest to "allow the radicals and nationalists who are clearly trying to take centre stage to prevail."
A spokesman for former PM Yulia Tymoshenko, who was released from jail on Saturday, says she has not yet decided whether to run for the presidency.
In the eastern city of Kharkiv, where Mr Yanukovych has enjoyed support, the head of the regional state administration has said he will also be a presidential candidate.
Speaking on Kanal 5 TV, Mykhaylo Dobkin, gave as his reason "the fact that a total attack on the rights of the Russian-speaking population is under way, that laws are being adopted that threaten all those who do not accept fascism and Nazism".
Mr Hague has warned that Ukraine faces imminent economic collapse without support from the international community.
The US has already said it is ready to give financial support to Ukraine to complement any future loan from the International Monetary Fund (IMF). Further promised loans from Russia are looking increasingly unlikely.
The Ukrainian currency the hryvnia has fallen heavily against the US dollar.
EU foreign affairs chief Catherine Ashton has held further talks in Kiev to discuss financial and political support for Ukraine's new leaders.
She urged the interim authorities to include Yanukovych supporters in any new government, adding: "Everyone I've spoken to here recognises the importance of this country sticking together. But we also know that there are big financial and economic challenges in the days, weeks and months ahead."
Senior US officials, including
Deputy Secretary of State William Burns, will join EU officials in Kiev
to participate in two days of meetings with political, business and
civil society leaders.
Thousands of people remain in Kiev's Independence Square, the Maidan.Unrest in Ukraine began in November when Mr Yanukovych rejected a landmark association and trade deal with the EU in favour of closer ties with Russia.
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