Ukraine President dismisses government (AP) Updated: 2005-09-09 08:51
Ukraine President Viktor Yushchenko fired his 7-month-old government
Thursday, dismissing his dynamic prime minister — the heroine of the Orange
Revolution that swept him to power — and accepting the resignation of one of the
movement's top financial backers.
The government breakup, amid allegations of corruption, deepened a crisis
that has diminished the popularity of the man whose dioxin poisoning and defiant
stand against election fraud seized the world's attention last year.
It also left Yushchenko looking isolated, especially in contrast to the broad
coalition that joined in the mass protests on Independence Square that many
Ukrainians saw as a fresh start for their country.
Ukrainian President Viktor Yushchenko speaks
at a news conference in Kiev, Thursday, Sept. 8, 2005. Yushchenko abruptly
sacked the government of Prime Minister Yulia Tymoshenko on Thursday amid
increasing signs that the fragile coalition knitted together in the
uprising against former President Leonid Kuchma was unraveling.
[AP] | "We've stepped away from the goals of the
revolution," the president told the Ukrainian people, saying he had to act
against his friends for the sake of the nation. He accused Cabinet members of
focusing more on infighting than running the country of 48 million.
"I could not pretend that nothing was happening. Not for this did I survive a
poisoning. Not for this did people stand on the square. I had to take radical
steps," said Yushchenko, who rose to power on promises to end the corruption
that blackened the reign of his predecessor, Leonid Kuchma.
But the dissolution of the government led by charismatic Prime Minister Yulia
Tymoshenko and acceptance of tycoon Petro Poroshenko's resignation from the
powerful Security and Defense Council came at a dangerous time. Parliamentary
elections are six months away, and Yushchenko must win to cement his political
gains.
Instead, he could face a strong challenge from Tymoshenko, whose personal
style, combining up-to-the-minute couture with a traditional blond braid ringing
her head, made her a highly telegenic symbol during the demonstrations late last
year.
She has since chafed at having to stifle her more radical impulses in the
interests of keeping Yushchenko's team together, and her popularity — reflected
by the chants of "Yulia!" that often drowned out Yushchenko's speeches — has not
diminished.
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