16/07/2015
La malédiction de l'Ukraine...
16 juillet
Pravy Sektor : Porochenko ne pourra pas fuir
en cas de coup d'Etat !
Le mouvement ultranationaliste Pravy Sektor (Secteur Droit) est persuadé que le président ukrainien Piotr Porochenko ne pourra pas fuir le pays en cas de coup d'Etat, comme l'avait fait son prédécesseur Victor Ianoukovitch, annonce la Voix de l'Amérique, en citant le porte-parole de Pravy Sektor, Artem Skoropadskiy.
"Dans le cas d'une nouvelle révolution, le président ukrainien Porochenko et ses partisans ne pourront pas fuir le pays comme l'avait fait le président précédent. Ils ne pourront attendre rien de plus qu'une exécution dans un sous-sol sombre, qui serait menée par un groupe de jeunes militaires ukrainiens ou par des membres de la Garde nationale", a affirmé Artem Skoropadskiy dans son interview pour Voice of America (VOA) (la Voix de l'Amérique), réalisée bien avant les événements de Moukatchevo.
Le porte-parole de Pravy Sektor a souligné que son organisation n’appelle pas à un coup d'Etat, mais qu'il est inévitable si le gouvernement reste sourd aux demandes des combattants des bataillons et de la population, lit-on dans l'article.
Malgré le fait que plusieurs experts, notamment le politologue allemand Andréas Umland, estiment que le soutien populaire de Pravy Sektor n'est pas grand, d'autres, comme le politologue américain Adrian Karatnitskiy, sont persuadés que l'auto-justice et les "mouvements d'extrême droite" sont devenus la "malédiction" de l'Ukraine et appellent les autorités de Kiev à enquêter sur Pravy Sektor, affirme VOA.
(...)
http://fr.sputniknews.com/international/20150715/1017046202.html
--------------------------------------
15 juillet
Mukachevo Crisis :
Right Sector Rehearses Uprising Against Kiev.
Ukraine teeters on the brink of a new conflict, this time in the West of the country: Right Sector nationalists tossed a challenge to the authorities, nearly declaring a war against them, Der Spiegel said. The EU is afraid that the conflict may spread to Romania, Hungary and Slovakia.
In the wake of a violent skirmish with police in the Western town of Mukachevo, the hardline union published a manifesto that practically equals to the declaration of war. On July 11, Right Sector militants engaged in a fight with local police and business structures in Mukachevo, which left three people dead and 13 injured, which Der Spiegel described as "opening the second front". Kiev declared a manhunt operation, and the Right Sector in response staged rallies in Ukrainian towns demanding the resignation of the interior minister.
Der Spiegel underlined the split between the Kiev regime and the nationalist union. A year and a half ago, during the Maidan unrest, Petro Poroshenko's team and the Right Sector were on the same journey, ousting legitimate president Viktor Yanukovuch and destroying Ukraine's statehood.
"The Ukrainian government armed volunteer battalions such as the Right Sector for the war in Donbass. Now the nationalists toss a challenge to the state itself."
The notorious Azov regiment, sporting Nazi symbols, decided to support the Right Sector, Der Spiegel said.
The Right Sector's statement labels law enforcement and other structures who attempt to detain the militants "state criminals" and declares "readiness to start a full-scale insurgent war against the internal occupation criminal-oligarch regime".
From the Right Sector's perspective, the Maidan turmoil "did not carry the process through and could not lead to a real national revolution", and the failure lies on the leadership "that came to power through the blood of the nation", Der Spiegel explained.
The Right Sector poses a threat of further escalation. Citing the group's spokesperson, Der Spiegel said that the nationalists were ready to send two armed formations to Kiev. Two of their units are stationed in Donbass, and there are 18 or 19 more battalions awaiting orders.
The Right Sector's leader Dmytro Yarosh "plays the role of a prudent statesman", heading to Mukachevo "to settle down the crisis peacefully", the magazine said. However, Yarosh does not want to hide that his loyalty to the authorities has limits: in an earlier interview with Der Spiegel, Yarosh said that "our revolution is not over yet".
He condemns the "liberal totalitarianism" in Europe and oligarchs.
Petro Poroshenko, who is a billionaire, seems too soft for the right wing, Der Spiegel said.
The Right Sector crisis in Western Ukraine could be dangerous for adjacent European countries. EU Ambassador Jan Tambinski hopes "for a quick resolution of the crisis", as Mukachevo is just 40 km away from Hungary, 90 km away from Slovakia and 110 km away from Romania.
http://sputniknews.com/europe/20150715/1024641107.html
14:07 Publié dans Blog, Histoire européenne, Les ignobles, Sputnik France / La voix de la Russie, Ukraine / Novorossiya | Lien permanent | Commentaires (0) | Tags : ukraine, mukachevo, moukatchevo, pravy sektor, dmitro yarosh, porc'ochenko, les ignobles
Les commentaires sont fermés.