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2007年VOA标准英语-Ukraine's Political Crisis Enters Second Week

时间:2007-05-30 06:30:18

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By Lisa McAdams
Moscow
10 April 2007

Ukraine's political crisis enters its second week, with no signs of a breakthrough. Pro-reform President Viktor Yushchenko and Prime Minister Viktor Yanukovych, a supporter of closer ties with Moscow, have held more talks aimed at defusing the standoff, but failed to reach a compromise. VOA's Lisa McAdams in Moscow reports:

President Yushchenko met rival Prime Minister Yanukovych as thousands of the prime minister's supporters converged1 again in downtown Kiev.

The protests had dwindled2 a bit during the long Easter holiday weekend, but demonstrators were back out again in force in support of Mr. Yanukovych. He and his supporters say the president's decree last Monday to dissolve parliament and call new elections May 27 is unconstitutional.

Supporters of Ukrainian PM Viktor Yanukovych attend a rally in Independence Square in Kiev, Ukraine, 10 Apr 2007

Supporters of Ukrainian PM Viktor Yanukovych attend a rally in Independence Square in Kiev, Ukraine, 10 Apr 2007
The protests have done little to sway President Yuschhenko, who reiterated3 to Mr. Yanukovych that the only way out of the crisis is new elections. The president has accused the prime minister of trying to usurp4 power through a series of unconstitutional maneuvers5. The two have met several times during the past few weeks, but neither party has shown any willingness to alter their position.

Ukraine's Constitutional Court is to take up the issue on Wednesday in a process that could yield a result at any time in the next month.

Until then, the battle of wills plays out in the streets, with Yanukovych's Regions Party vowing6 to bring thousands of more demonstrators to Kiev as time goes on. This pro-government supporter, Valentina Mikhalenko, says she is demonstrating against Yushchenko's pro-Western aims, such as NATO membership for Ukraine.

Valentina says she and other pro-government supporters do not want to see Ukraine join NATO. She says they want to stay close to Russia and other former Soviet7 Republics like Belarus.

Opposition8 supporters have been largely absent from the streets in order to lessen9 the chance for confrontation10. But opposition leaders have said they could still bring their supporters out in protest, if deemed necessary in the coming days.

Polls show that if an election were held today, President Yushchenko's Our Ukraine Party would place a distant third, behind Orange Revolution ally Yulia Timoshenko's bloc11 and the Regions Party.


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