'Ukrainian opposition doesn’t control crowds'
Ukrainian opposition aren’t asking for concessions, rather demanding the government’s complete capitulation, says political blogger Alexander Mercouris. The main problem is that the opposition leaders are not in control of the protesters.
RT:Ukraine’s opposition says it wants more
concessions form the government. Do you think they will to get
those concessions?
Alexander Mercouris: One does not know at this
point. What they are basically demanding are not concessions,
they’re demanding the government’s complete capitulation. They
want the president to resign, they want new elections, they want
new parliamentary elections and they want power transferred to
themselves. Whether Mr. Yanukovich is prepared to grant or agree
to those things remains to be seen. A few days ago, I would have
said now, but then I did not expect for him to offer Mr.
Yatsenyuk and Mr. Klitschko posts in his government. At the
moment the position of the government is that they will not agree
to elections.
RT:The opposition and government agreed to
clear the street of Kiev last night, but there were still
protesters there. How in control do you think oppositions’
leaders are?
AM: They are not in control. If we can go back
to what happened last Sunday - the violence began when the
opposition leaders spoke at Maidan Square, made an extremely
disappointing impression on the crowds and the crowds then
shifted and attempted to go down Grushevskogo Street towards the
parliament and the government buildings. Mr. Klitschko tried to
restrain them, to stop the violence that was going on and he got
squirted by a fire extinguisher. He doesn’t control the crowds.
And this is a problem because he goes to negotiate, agrees to
things with the government, the moment he gets back to Maidan
[Independence] Square, those agreements are simply torn up
because the protesters who are on the street are not responding
to him.
RT:Meanwhile the EU has been stepping up
its pressure on Ukrainian government. There is a statement from
the head of the European Parliament Martin Shultz - he is urging
sanctions. How close is Brussels to acting on these threats?
AM: I don’t think it is as close as it makes
out. There are divisions within the European Union itself. There
are some hardliners like Mr. Shultz, but I am not convinced that
everybody in the EU agrees with this.
RT:It looks like the government is trying
hard to appease the opposition. Do you think its efforts will
have any impact on the EU vision of the conflict?
AM: I don't think it does. The hardliners with
the EU have long ago made up their minds, which is that they
support the opposition and they oppose the government. And they
are just not interested in who is actually driving these protests
on the streets or where the violence is coming from. As far as
they are concerned it is the government that is to blame.
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