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Yanukovich Offers Yushchenko Prime Minister Job

Ukraine PM’s desperate offer (The Australian)

UKRAINE’S peaceful orange revolution was on the brink of victory last night as the thousands in Kiev’s Independence Square cheered the latest concession from the country’s authoritarian regime. Pro-Russian Prime Minister Viktor Yanukovich, the official winner of presidential elections widely claimed to have been rigged, last night offered the prime ministership to pro-Western rival Viktor Yushchenko. “If my victory is confirmed, I am ready to offer the post of prime minister to Viktor Yushchenko,” said Mr Yanukovich, adding that under proposed constitutional reforms the post would become the most important in the country. If, however, the result is annulled by the Supreme Court, which last night began a second day of hearings into Mr Yanukovich’s complaint that Sunday’s election was stolen from him, he would propose holding a new poll without either of them as a candidate.

Mr Yushchenko rejected the desperate offer to cling to power. “No, I cannot accept these proposals,” he said.

As the protest movement became more confident that momentum was heading its way, Russian President Vladimir Putin told German Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder that Moscow would respect the results of any new election. Mr Yanukovich’s mentor, outgoing President Leonid Kuchma, less than 24 hours earlier conceded that the election should be re-run. Mr Kuchma, who has ruled the former Soviet state for the past decade, said this appeared to be the only way to resolve the crisis that has seen hundreds of thousands of protesters rally on the streets of Kiev and other cities in freezing conditions for more than a week.

Mr Yushchenko is widely expected to win any fair election, after his popularity has been demonstrated by the size and passion of the crowds that have jammed the streets waving flags and scarves of orange, his campaign colour.

This one appears to be about over. If the supreme court rules that Yanukovich committed fraud and Yushchenko actually won, simply installing Yushchenko certainly makes more sense than a do-over election.

About the Author: James Joyner is the publisher of Outside the Beltway and the managing editor of the Atlantic Council. He's a former Army officer, Desert Storm vet, and college professor with a PhD in political science from The University of Alabama. He lives just outside the Beltway in Alexandria, Virginia.

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Comments
 

There's some buzz out there to the effect that all the nice words from the oligarchs is nothing but a charm offensive designed to keep the issue in doubt until the opposition gets its fill of cold, hunger, and the thousand other slings and arrows one might face in a tent in winter.

This thing ain't over by a long shot.

Cheers...

Posted by the spectator | November 30, 2004 | 10:20 am | Permalink
 

The president & current prime minister's nuclear option is for partition, in which they'll have use arms to achieve that limited goal. The Ukrain constitutation does not allow for that, short of arm rebellion.

Posted by BigFire | November 30, 2004 | 10:36 am | Permalink
 

Since when was Wierd Al Ukranian?

Posted by Rusty | November 30, 2004 | 01:45 pm | Permalink
 

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