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Ukraine: Torn between Russia and the West Paris, Feb 23 (AFP) Feb 23, 2022 Ukraine, sandwiched between Russia and the European Union, has since independence in 1991 been torn between its former Soviet master Moscow and the Western institutions it wants to join. Here is an overview:
In December 1991, Ukraine votes in favour of independence from the Soviet Union in a referendum. Russian president Boris Yeltsin accepts the vote and Russia, Ukraine and Belarus set up a Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS). But over the next five years, Ukraine seeks ways to escape Russia's guardianship, which goes back three centuries. Perceiving the CIS as an attempt to bring ex-Soviet republics under Moscow's control, it takes a lukewarm approach to the structure and turns towards the West. It seeks ties with the US-led NATO military alliance -- a no-go for Russia. In the aftermath of the end of the Cold War, Ukraine, Russia, the UK and the US in December 1994 agree to respect the independence, sovereignty and borders of Ukraine. The agreement is in exchange for Ukraine abandoning the nuclear weapons it inherited from the Soviet Union.
It settles a key disagreement by allowing Russia to retain ownership of the majority of ships in the Black Sea fleet based in Ukraine's Crimea while requiring that Moscow pay Kyiv a modest rent to use the port of Sebastopol. Moscow also remains Kyiv's most important commercial partner, with Ukraine totally dependent on Russian oil and gas. Ukraine draws a warning from the EU in 2003 when it signs an accord with Russia, Belarus and Kazakhstan on a Common Economic Space. Brussels says that it could hinder Ukraine's rapprochement with the bloc and its membership to the World Trade Organization.
Ukraine's 2004 presidential election is marred by fraud and the victory of the pro-Russian Viktor Yanukovych provokes unprecedented protests in the peaceful Orange Revolution. The uproar leads to the vote being cancelled and in December pro-Western opposition leader Viktor Yushchenko, who was victim of a mysterious dioxin poisoning during the campaign, becomes president. It marks the beginning of a new political era in Ukraine after 10 years under the thumb of Leonid Kuchma, who staggered between Europe and Moscow. Yuschenko swiftly reiterates Ukraine's wish to join the EU, despite reservations from the bloc, along with NATO. In 2008 at a summit in Bucharest, NATO leaders agree that Ukraine has a future in the alliance, sparking Moscow's ire. Russia and Ukraine engage in several disputes, notably over gas in 2006 and 2009 which disrupt Europe's energy supplies.
It sparks weeks of massive protests by pro-European opposition groups demanding the pro-Russian president quits. The uprising, centred on Kiev's Independence Square, comes to a head in February 2014 when police fire on protesters. Around 100 demonstrators and 20 police officers die during the three-month uprising. Yanukovych flees to Russia and is impeached.
In March 2014 Russian President Vladimir Putin signs a treaty absorbing Crimea into Russia. The annexation provokes the worst diplomatic crisis between the West and Russia since the fall of the Soviet Union. Then in April, a pro-Russian rebellion erupts in Ukraine's industrial eastern areas. Pro-Russian separatists in Donetsk and Lugansk declare their regions to be independent. Ukraine and its Western allies accuse Russia of instigating the uprising and pouring in arms and troops to bolster the self-proclaimed republics. The clashes become a full-blown conflict in May and the conflict has since left more than 14,000 people dead. After massing tens of thousands of soldiers on Ukraine's borders, Putin on February 21, 2022 recognises the independence of Donetsk and Lugansk. He also orders Russian troops into the regions, without giving the scope or timetable of the deployment. acm-kd/jmy/dl
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