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  • 13
    Feb
    2013
    10:38pm, EST

    5 killed as plane crash-lands in eastern Ukraine

    Irina Gorbaseva / AP

    Investigators at the scene of a plane crash outside an airport in the eastern Ukrainian city of Donetsk on Thursday.

    By Richard Balmforth, Reuters

    At least five people were killed when a plane carrying supporters to a European soccer match in eastern Ukraine overshot the runway and broke up when it attempted an emergency landing late on Wednesday, officials said.

    The twin-engined Antonov turboprop was bringing 45 passengers and crew on a charter flight from the Black Sea coastal city of Odessa to Donetsk - most of them fans looking forward to attending a Champions League clash between the Ukrainian home team Shakhtar and Germany's Borussia Dortmund.

    The emergencies ministry, quoted by Interfax news agency, said the aircraft overshot the landing strip at Donetsk airport which an eyewitness said was shrouded in thick fog at the time. It overturned and broke up.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    Apart from the five people confirmed dead, 12 others had been injured, the ministry said.

    Andriy Shyshatsky, head of Donetsk's regional administration speaking before a fifth dead was confirmed, said the majority of passengers had been saved.

    "One person is visible in the wreckage, but we don't yet know whether he is alive or not. We are searching for one other person," Shyshatsky told journalists.

    An airport source quoted by Interfax said a stewardess who had been at the rear of the plane was unaccounted for.

    A minute of silence was observed for the dead at the start of the Champions League match.

    There was no immediate word on why the flight crew had had to make an emergency landing. But a survivor of the crash, quoted by Interfax, said there had been a fire on board which had been brought under control.

    This was not immediately confirmed by officials.

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    4 comments

    How tragic lives have been lost in an airplane crash. It seems to be something that happens regardless how much care is taken to avoid.Just proving how fragile life is.That no one can take life for granted. Each needs to appreciate all they have.

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    Explore related topics: ukraine, plane-crash, featured
  • 17
    Dec
    2012
    4:14pm, EST

    Judge, 3 relatives found beheaded in Ukraine

    By Reuters

    The decapitated bodies of a Ukrainian judge, who was an internationally known antiques collector, and his wife, son and son's girlfriend were found in his apartment in the city of Kharkiv this weekend, police said on Monday.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    Interior Minister Vitaly Zakharchenko was quoted by local media as saying that several antiques appeared to be missing from the home of Volodymyr Trofimov, 58, who had a collection of rare coins, military medals and china statuettes.

    An Interior Ministry statement said "all versions (being looked into by investigators) are based on the same conclusion: this crime was carefully planned and thought out in advance."

    Quoting state prosecutors, Ukrainian newspaper Segodnya said Trofimov's cases as a district court judge in recent years were limited to alimony payments, petty theft and debt collections.

    The lock on the door of Trofimov's flat, located in a Soviet-era apartment block, was intact, according to the newspaper. Investigators have yet to find the heads of the dead, whose bodies were found on Saturday.

    Ukraine, a former Soviet republic, had a murder rate of 5.2 per 100,000 population in 2010, compared to 10.2 in Russia and 1.1 in Poland, according to the U.N. Office on Drugs and Crime.

    However, execution-style murders like that of the judge are rare and senior law enforcers -- including the prosecutor general and Interior Ministry and security service SBU officials -- flew to Kharkiv over the weekend to coordinate the investigation.

    The most infamous decapitation case in Ukraine was the 2000 murder of investigative reporter and editor Georgiy Gongadze, whose body was found in a forest soon after he was abducted.

    Several police officers have been convicted for the murder and Yuri Kravchenko, interior minister at the time, was found dead in his country home in 2005. He had been shot in the head twice in what the authorities ruled was a suicide.

    A murder charge against Leonid Kuchma, Ukraine's president from 1994 to 2005 and the main target of Gongadze's critical reports, was thrown out by a local court last year.

    More world stories from NBC News:

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    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    9 comments

    Band all knifes, they can kill. This was a horrible crime!!!!

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  • 13
    Dec
    2012
    8:02am, EST

    Ukraine lawmakers brawl in parliament for second day running

    Sergey Dolzhenko / EPA

    Opposition and pro-presidential lawmakers scuffle on the podium during a session of the Ukrainian parliament in Kiev on December 13, 2012.

    Sergei Supinsky / AFP - Getty Images

    Deputies of the opposition fight with deputies of the majority for a second time in two days on December 13, 2012.

    Seconds out, Round 2! Fights broke out in the Ukrainian parliament for a second time in two days on Thursday, Agence France-Presse reports.

    The opening session of the Verkhkovna Rada on Wednesday began in a typically raucous fashion (as seen on PhotoBlog yesterday) as a fight erupted in the chamber between opposition MPs and two deputies whom they accused of defecting to the pro-government camp. Several lawmakers from the opposition nationalist Svoboda group chased two men they called "turncoats" — a father and a son — to prevent them from taking the oath.  

    Ukraine's parliament has seen several physical confrontations in recent years amid bitterness between opposition and pro-government camps. 

    Sergei Chuzavkov / AP

    Ukrainian lawmakers fight around the rostrum on Dec. 13, 2012.

    Sergei Supinsky / AFP - Getty Images

    Deputies of the opposition fight with deputies of majority party during the opening of the newly elected parliament on December 12, 2012.

    Sergei Supinsky / AFP - Getty Images

    Deputies fight for a second time in two days, during the second session of the newly elected parliament on December 13, 2012.

    Follow @NBCNewsPictures

    •Sign up for the NBCNews.com Photos Newsletter

    Scuffles between lawmakers from Ukraine's ruling party and the opposition broke out in the country's parliament once again on Thursday morning over the election of parliamentary officials. NBCNews.com's Alex Witt reports.

    30 comments

    it takes passion for something you stand for to fight like that. Our lawmakers are not passionate about anything except lining their pockets with money, thats why they would never fight. They do not care enough about anything except their own wealth and the building of it. Nuff Said, Semper Fi!!

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    Explore related topics: europe, brawl, ukraine, world-news, parliament, featured, kiev
  • 29
    Oct
    2012
    9:53am, EDT

    Ukraine president's party cruises toward election win

    By Reuters

    KIEV, Ukraine -- Ukrainian President Victor Yanukovych's party is on course to secure a parliamentary majority after an election, but will face an opposition boosted by resurgent nationalists and a liberal party led by boxing champion Vitaly Klitschko.

    Exit polls and first results from Sunday's vote showed Yanukovych's Party of the Regions would, with help from long-time allies, win more than half the seats in the 450-member assembly after boosting public sector wages and welfare handouts to win over disillusioned voters in its traditional power bases.


    "It is clear the Party of the Regions has won," Prime Minister Mykola Azarov told reporters. "These elections signal confidence in the president's policies."

    Victory for the pro-business Regions party, which represents the interests of the wealthy industrialists bankrolling it, will underpin the leadership of the president, who comes up for re-election in the former Soviet republic in 2015.

    His rule since taking power in February 2010 has been marked by an accumulation of presidential powers and tension with the West over the imprisonment of his rival, opposition leader and former prime minister Yulia Tymoshenko.

    Balloting is in two parts, with half the seats allotted to individual candidates winning local district polls and half to parties according to their share of the vote nationally.

    Partial results from the Central Election Commission showed the Regions winning 118 constituencies; that, with its projected national vote, would give the party 205 seats. With support from allies such as the communists and independents, the Regions appear certain to reach the 226 seats needed to form a majority.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    The main, united opposition bloc, which includes Tymoshenko's Batkivshchyna (Fatherland), was in second place on the party list vote and leading in 36 individual districts.

    The Regions appeared to have fared well despite the government's unpopularity and the authoritarian image of Yanukovych, which does not sell well across the country.

    Its success was due in part to increased state handouts and promises to enhance the status of the Russian language - an important pledge for Russian-speaking voters in the president's eastern power base, who fear being at a disadvantage to native speakers of Ukrainian.

    The introduction of constituency voting also favored Regions candidates, who could draw on state resources.

    Svoboda surprise
    The biggest surprise came from the nationalist Svoboda (Freedom) party which, according to partial results, won about 7.8 percent in the party-list voting. This means it will have significant representation in parliament for the first time.

    The unexpectedly strong showing by Svoboda -- which is based in the Ukrainian-speaking west, pursues a strongly Ukrainian nationalist agenda and opposes attempts by the Regions to promote the use of Russian language -- bolstered the ranks of an opposition which has been weakened by the jailing of Tymoshenko.

    The other new opposition wild card in parliament will be held by UDAR. Led by boxer Klitschko, under an acronym meaning "punch", the party was in fourth place behind the Regions, communists and the opposition bloc that includes Batkivshchyna.

    Many voters made clear they were frustrated with the performance of the established political parties over the past few years. Corruption is a big concern in Ukraine and many of the 46 million Ukrainians face economic hardship.

    "We have seen some parties in power and others as well," said Tetyana, 27, referring to Batkivshchyna and the Regions.

    "We have seen the results," she added, after voting in Kiev.

    Even in the industrial and coalmining city of Donetsk, Yanukovych's main stronghold in the east of the country, many voters said they were disillusioned by the government's record.

    "I voted for the Regions Party but simply because it is the lesser of the evils. I can't say I am a great fan of the Regions, but all the rest are worse," said 58-year-old Viktor Grigoryev, a head of section in the construction sector.

    Observers' verdict
    Tymoshenko was jailed for seven years last year for abuse of office over a 2009 gas deal with Russia which she made when she was prime minister. The Yanukovych government says the agreement saddled Ukraine with an enormous price for gas supplies.

    The second most populous of the former Soviet states, a major exporter of steel and grain sandwiched between Russia and the European Union, Ukraine is more isolated politically on the international stage than it has been for years.

    It is at odds with the United States and the European Union over Tymoshenko, and does not see eye to eye with Moscow, which has turned a deaf ear to Kiev's calls for cheaper gas.

    In Ukraine, the government is also blamed for not stamping out corruption and has backed off from painful reforms that could secure much-needed lending from the International Monetary Fund (IMF) to shore up its export-driven economy.

    Complete Europe coverage on NBCNews.com

    With the West seeing the poll as a test of Ukraine's commitment to democracy after Tymoshenko's imprisonment, interest will focus on the judgment by observers from the OSCE European security and human rights body later on Monday.

    A well-prepared 'borshch'
    Klitschko, the 6 ft. 7 in.-tall WBC heavyweight boxing champion, will now enter parliament at the head of his new party and could be a towering force in the assembly. He has been critical of corruption and cronyism under Yanukovych.

    He says his party will team up with Arseny Yatsenyuk, who leads the united opposition in Tymoshenko's absence, as well as with other opposition groups, including Svoboda -- though his refusal to join a pre-election coalition engendered suspicion.

    Full World coverage on NBCNews.com

    He ruled out any pact with the Regions. "We do not foresee any joint work with the Party of the Regions and its communist satellite," he said. "We are ready to work with those political parties which propose a European path of development."

    Svoboda leader Oleh Tyahnybok, a 43-year-old surgeon, pledged to stick by a pre-election agreement and work with Yatsenyuk and other opposition leaders in parliament. He also pressed Klitschko to formally join the united opposition.

    "We can only hope that, having looked at the situation which has emerged, Vitaly Klitschko will unite with us," he said.

    Political analyst Volodymyr Fesenko, of the Penta think tank, said the biggest "sensation" was Svoboda's success and that it reflected a protest against the political establishment.

    "The Ukrainian political borshch has got a bit more spicy," he said, referring to the soup that is a national dish. "There will be more pepper -- but how it is going to taste is another question."

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    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    4 comments

    Great. Another story for those who want to feel like they've got their thumb on the pulse of world politics, but are too lazy to do any research on the people who are running for their town council.

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    Explore related topics: ukraine, tymoshenko, featured, kiev, yanukovich
  • 8
    Jun
    2012
    11:22am, EDT

    Europe soccer tournament overshadowed by racism claims, boycott

    Pawel Ulatowski / Reuters

    Netherlands soccer players attend a training session during the Euro 2012 at Wisla stadium in Krakow on Wednesday.

    By Marian Smith, msnbc.com

    Europe's biggest soccer tournament is being overshadowed by a boycott by Western European officials over alleged human rights abuses, and by widespread concerns about racist taunts by home crowds in Ukraine and Poland, co-hosts of the event.

    On Friday, just hours before the first game of the Euro 2012 tournament, European soccer governing body UEFA said in a statement that it had been informed of "isolated incidents of racist chanting" at the Netherlands team training session earlier in the week, further tarnishing the tournament.


    Dutch players heard monkey chants from some people among a crowd of 25,000 at a training session at Wisla Krakow's stadium in Poland on Wednesday, a spokesman for the Netherlands team said.

    ProSoccerTalk: The teams competing in the European Championships

    The training session came only hours after the team -- for decades a reflection of the multicultural makeup of the nation -- had made solemn and emotional visits to the former Auschwitz-Birkenau death camps close to Krakow. 

    "Some players did hear some monkey noises. That is why they moved to the other side of the pitch," the team spokeswoman said Friday.

    A recent British television documentary, entitled "Stadiums of Hate," fueled concerns about fans' behavior at club matches. The program was shown in Poland earlier this week and the issue dominated questions at the first news conference of UEFA President Michel Platini at the tournament.

    Platini promised that referees will stop matches if players suffer racist abuse. But he also warned players they would be shown a yellow card if they acted alone by walking off the field.

    Euro 2012 scoreboard

    "UEFA has a zero tolerance policy when it comes to discriminatory behavior and has given the power to referees to stop matches in case of any repeated racist behavior," UEFA said Friday. 

    Concerns over 'rule of law' in Ukraine
    The controversy over racism during the tournament came as the U.K. joined a growing boycott by Western European officials over the jailing of leading Ukrainian opposition figure Yulia Tymoshenko, which many believe was politically motivated.

    The British Foreign Office confirmed to msnbc.com on Friday that there would be no official British presence at England's three group-stage games, making it the latest in a string of countries to say it would not attend the tournament in protest of Ukraine's treatment of Tymoshenko.


    Follow @msnbc_world

    "No ministers will be attending group games at Euro 2012. We are keeping attendance at later stages of the tournament under review in the light of ministers' busy schedules ahead of the Olympics and widespread concerns about selective justice and the rule of law in Ukraine," a Foreign Office spokesman said.

    Several other European nations have already announced they will not be sending official representatives to the games, including France and Germany, which both also cited Ukraine's treatment of Tymoshenko.

    Tymoshenko is serving a seven-year jail term on charges of abuse of office, condemned as politically motivated by the West. Allegations she was beaten by prison officials prompted top EU officials to announce a boycott of championship games hosted in Ukraine.

    President Viktor Yanukovich still hopes the tournament will show the world how far Ukraine has come since it broke free of the Soviet Union in 1991 but the risk of it backfiring after a deluge of bad publicity is increasing. 

    ProSoccerTalk: Racism, politics at Euro 2012; problems that won't go away

    "Europe 2012 has provided a unique opportunity to present our country to the world and to achieve European standards, not only in organizing the tournament but in the life of our citizens," said Deputy Prime Minister Borys Kolesnikov.

    "If Ukraine does not cope well with the organization of the tournament and show it's a hospitable host, it will reflect on its reputation," said Kolesnikov, who was in charge of preparations for the finals.

    The month-long tournament was starting in Poland on Friday and the final will be held in the Ukrainian capital, Kiev, on July 1. 

    Reuters and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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    42 comments

    So all other kinds of violence is ok at soccer tournaments, just don't say any racial slurs. Geesh.

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  • 6
    Jun
    2012
    7:41am, EDT

    'Putinization' spreading in Europe, US group warns

    Peter Kohalmi / AFP - Getty Images

    Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban, above, and Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych have been systematically breaking down critical democratic checks and balances, Freedom House said in a report Wednesday.

    By F. Brinley Bruton, msnbc.com

    LONDON -- The leaders of Hungary and Ukraine are following in the footsteps of Russian President Vladimir Putin and imperiling the young democracies, U.S.-based non-governmental organization Freedom House said in a report on Wednesday.

    "Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban and Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych, under the pretext of so-called reforms, have been systematically breaking down critical checks and balances," Freedom House's president David Kramer said in a statement.


    "They appear to be pursuing the 'Putinization' of their countries, which is ironic, given that in Russia itself Putinism has been largely discredited over the past year, as ordinary Russians increasingly seek guarantees of government accountability and transparency," he added. 


    Follow @msnbc_world

    A wave of demonstrations have swept through Russia in recent months, with citizens protesting corruption and the Putin government's growing power.  

    On Wednesday, Russian lawmakers voted through a controversial bill that dramatically increases fines for those accused of participating in banned public protests. The bill was proposed in response to big public rallies against Putin's second term as president.

    Hungary president quits in plagiarism scandal

    The autocratic tendencies seen in the post-communist democracies pointed out in the Nations in Transit 2012 report risk taking root elsewhere among the European Union's newest members and aspiring members, Freedom House warned. Five other EU members in the region -- Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, Lithuania, Romania, and Slovakia -- also have seen a decline in democratic practices and traditions over the past five years, according to Freedom House.

    Alexey Nikolsky /Ria Novosti /Pr / EPA

    Russian President Vladimir Putin (R) talks to Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych (L) during their bilateral talks in Moscow, Russia, on May 15.

    Hungary's anti-democratic lurch, made worse by the economic downturn, was deemed the worst in the region by Freedom House. 

    The report cited a swift dismantling of democratic checks in Hungary, made easier by a weak opposition and the ruling supermajority in parliament. 

    Huge rally in Prague against austerity measures, alleged corruption

    "Hungary’s precipitous descent is the most glaring example among the newer European Union members," the report added. "Its deterioration over the past five years has affected institutions that form the bedrock of democratically accountable systems, including independent courts and media."

    More than 10,000 people stormed the streets in protest after Vladimir Putin's victory in Russia's presidential election. NBC's Jim Maceda reports.

    Hungary is a member of the EU while Ukraine is an aspiring member.

    Watch the most-viewed videos on msnbc.com

    While the trend predates Orban's conservative government, his administration's drive has hastened the trend, Freedom House said. 

    Officials at the embassies of Hungary and Ukraine in London were not immediately available to comment on the report.

    Freedom House is a U.S.-based non-governmental organization that conducts research and advocacy on democracy, political freedom and human rights. It was founded in 1941, with first lady Eleanor Roosevelt and defeated Republican presidential candidate Wendell Willkie as its honorary chairpersons.

    Reuters and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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    Follow us on Twitter: @msnbc_world


     

    104 comments

    As if the same thing isn't happening here.

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  • 24
    May
    2012
    2:27pm, EDT

    Scuffle in Ukraine parliament over official use of Russian language

    Reuters

    Deputies scuffle during a session in the chamber of the Ukrainian parliament in Kiev on Thursday. Opposition deputies brought proceedings to a halt inside the Ukrainian parliament on Thursday, when they staged an action against the bill about the basics of the language policy.

    Maks Levin / AP

    Lawmakers from pro-presidential and oppositional factions fight in the parliament session hall in Kiev, Ukraine on Thursday. A violent scuffle has erupted in Ukraine's parliament over a bill that would allow the use of the Russian language in courts, hospitals and other institutions in the Russian-speaking regions of the country.

    Reuters

    Deputies scuffle during a session in the chamber of the Ukrainian parliament in Kiev.

    Maks Levin / AP

    An opposition lawmaker Mykola Petruk receives first aid after fighting between pro-presidential and opposition factions in the parliament session hall in Kiev.

    A fight broke out on the floor of the Ukrainian parliament as lawmakers debated the use of Russian as the official language in certain parts of the Ukraine. NBC's Willie Geist reports.

    •Sign up for the msnbc.com Photos Newsletter

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    4 comments

    no article?

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    Explore related topics: politics, ukraine, government, world-news, parliament
  • 27
    Apr
    2012
    7:18am, EDT

    Four blasts rock Ukraine city weeks before Euro 2012 soccer tournament

    At least four blasts explode within minutes in Dnipropetrovsk, Ukraine. leaving at least 27 people injured. Police believe the blasts are a terrorist attack ahead of the Euro 2012 soccer tournament. Msnbc.com's Dara Brown reports.

    By Alastair Jamieson, msnbc.com

    Updated at 10:30 a.m. ET: Four explosions within minutes rocked the center of the eastern Ukraine city of Dnipropetrovsk Friday, injuring at least 27 people in what prosecutors believe is a terrorist attack just weeks ahead of Europe's biggest soccer tournament.

    At least nine children were hurt, The Associated Press reported.

    The first blast occurred at a tramway stop, injuring five people, while the second injured seven people outside a movie theater, Emergency Situations Ministry spokeswoman Yulia Yershova told The Associated Press.


    Follow @alastairjam

    She said the third blast wounded three near a railway station and a fourth blast was also heard in the city center but it was not yet clear if anybody was injured.

    Along with Poland, Ukraine is to be joint host of the Euro 2012 soccer tournament between June 8 and July 1. Dnipropetrovsk is among the cities that will host major games.

    Chris Cole, a 22-year-old teacher from England, told The Guardian: "There was a loud bang that blew my earphones out of my ears," he said. "The first thing I saw was a lady lying on the ground, then another lady came running off the tram screaming, holding her arm. A few people were wandering around confused."

    AFP - Getty Images

    A man tires to help a victim after one of the blasts in the eastern Ukrainian city of Dnipropetrovsk on Friday.

    Authorities recently played down the likelihood of terror attacks during the tournament.

    The English-language Ukraine Internet site Kyiv Post quoted the Interfax-Ukraine news agency as reporting that the regional prosecutor has opened a criminal case on counts of terrorism.

    Al-Jazeera reported that the first explosion was caused by a bomb in a garbage bin. 

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    Follow us on Twitter: @msnbc_world


    55 comments

    Apparently the terrorists found Ukraine on the map: "Oh look, we didn't sh....t here yet".

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  • 26
    Apr
    2012
    11:02am, EDT

    Marking the Chernobyl disaster 26 years later

    Ivan Sekretarev / AP

    Russian veteran fire fighters lay flowers at Mitino Memorial to commemorate those who died after the Chernobyl 1986 nuclear disaster, in Moscow on April 26. Russians marked the 26th anniversary of the Chernobyl nuclear disaster, which was the world's worst ever nuclear accident.

    Gleb Garanich / Reuters

    Men walk near a containment shelter for the damaged fourth reactor at the Chernobyl nuclear power plant on April 26. Belarus, Ukraine and Russia mark the 26th anniversary of the Chernobyl disaster, the world's worst civil nuclear accident, on Thursday.

    Sergei Supinsky / AFP - Getty Images

    Victims of Chernobyl nuclear accident's widows hold pictures of their late husbands during a memorial ceremony at the Chernobyl victims memorial in Kiev on April 26.

    AP reports -- "The Chernobyl disaster underscored that mankind must be extra careful in using nuclear technologies," Ukraine's president Viktor Yanukovych said during a ceremony Thursday inaugurating the initial assembly of a gigantic arch-shaped steel containment building to cover the remnants of the exploded reactor. "Nuclear accidents lead to global consequences. They are not a problem of just one country, they affect the life of entire regions."

    The April 26, 1986, explosion spewed a cloud of radiation over much of the northern hemisphere, forcing hundreds of thousands from their homes in heavily hit areas of Ukraine, Belarus and western Russia. The Soviet government initially tried to hush up the explosion and resisted immediately evacuating nearby residents. It also failed to tell the public what happened or instruct residents and cleanup workers on how to protect themselves against radiation, which significantly increased the health damage from the disaster.

    A shelter called the "sarcophagus" was hastily erected over the damaged reactor, but it has been crumbling and leaking radiation in recent years and a new confinement structure is necessary.

    Yanukovych said 2 million people have been hurt by the tragedy and it was the state's obligation to protect and treat them.

    But his reassurances fell flat with some Chernobyl cleanup workers and victims. About 2,000 protesters staged an angry rally Thursday outside parliament in Kiev, demanding an increase in compensations and pensions.

    Read the full story.

    Photojournalist documents Chernobyl aftermath for nearly two decades, then creates an iPad app to tell the story

    Sergei Supinsky / AFP - Getty Images

    A Chernobyl's handicapped person cries in front of the Chernobyl victims memorial in Kiev during a memorial ceremony on April 26. Ukraine launched today construction of a new shelter to permanently secure the stricken Chernobyl plant as it marked the 26th anniversary of the world's worst nuclear disaster.

    Andrew Kravchenko / EPA

    The widow of a victim holds a child during a ceremony, commemorating the 26th anniversary of the Chernobyl nuclear accident in Kiev, Ukraine, on April 26. On April 26, 1986 reactor number 4 blew apart at the Chernobyl power station. Facing nuclear disaster on an unprecedented scale Soviet authority tried to contain the situation by sending thousands of men into a radioactive area.

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    3 comments

    Very sad - scary to think this could happen again like in Japan. There was an interesting show regarding the disaster and how the contamination has affected the wildlife, waterways, etc. Surprisingly, animals are thriving at about the same rate as areas not affected by the nuclear disaster.

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    Explore related topics: russia, nuclear, ukraine, chernobyl
  • 25
    Apr
    2012
    6:18am, EDT

    Lawyer: Jailed Ukrainian ex-PM Yulia Tymoshenko beaten, on hunger strike

    Sergei Supinsky / AFP - Getty Images

    Yulia Tymoshenko is in jail convicted of abuse of office.

    By Reuters

    KHARKIV, Ukraine -- Former Ukrainian Prime Minister Yulia Tymoshenko has gone on hunger strike in prison after guards dragged her off her bed and punched her in the stomach, her lawyer said on Tuesday.

    Prison authorities deny the accusations.

    Tymoshenko, the main opponent of President Viktor Yanukovich, is in jail convicted of abuse of office. She said the beating took place while she was being moved to a state-run hospital last Friday after complaining of back pain. 


    "They approached my bed, put a sheet over me and started dragging me off the bed, using brute physical force. In pain and desperate, I started defending myself the way I could and received a strong fist punch in the abdomen," Tymoshenko said in a statement read to reporters by her lawyer, Serhiy Vlasenko.

    The 51-year-old was convicted last year in a case that strained relations between Ukraine and the West, which saw it as politically motivated.

    PhotoBlog: Ukraine court jails former PM Yulia Tymoshenko for 7 years

    In the statement, she said she had been attacked by three prison guards: "They twisted my arms, lifted me up and dragged me outside wrapped in a blanket. I thought those were the last minutes of my life."

    The prison administration denied using any force against Tymoshenko, the Interfax news agency reported.

    A state prosecutor denied allegations of beating but said Tymoshenko's move last week had indeed been forced.

    "She packed up and got dressed and then lay on her bed and said 'I am not going anywhere'," Interfax quoted regional prosecutor Henady Tyurin as saying.

    Reuters

    Yulia Tymoshenko waves from a stretcher as she is being carried to an ambulance on Sunday.

    "The law ... allows the prison service to use physical force: (guards) lifted her, carried her to the car and took her to the hospital."

    Tymoshenko returned to her prison in the city of Kharkiv on Sunday after she refused to be examined.

    The opposition leader has been on a hunger strike since Friday to draw international attention to the situation in Ukraine, Vlasenko said.

    Facing new trial
    Tymoshenko was sentenced to seven years in prison in October, convicted of abusing her power as prime minister in brokering a 2009 gas deal with Russia.

    Yanukovich's government says the deal ran against national interests and has saddled Ukraine with an exorbitant price for vital energy supplies.

    Tymoshenko is now standing a new trial, charged with tax evasion and attempted embezzlement, and faces up to 12 years in prison if found guilty.

    She refused to attend the opening hearing this month citing poor health. The next session is scheduled for April 28.

    Tymoshenko has denied any wrongdoing in both cases, dismissing them as part of a campaign of repression by Yanukovich's government.

    Russia expressed concern over "media reports about the worsening health" of Tymoshenko. A Foreign Ministry statement urged Ukrainian authorities to ensure her legal rights are protected and to display "humanity".

    The European Union has warned Ukraine that its members will not ratify key bilateral agreements on political association and free trade while Tymoshenko remains in prison.

    Tymoshenko was one of the leaders of the 2004 Orange Revolution which derailed Yanukovich's first bid for the presidency. She went on to serve twice as prime minister and lost the 2010 presidential vote to Yanukovich in a close race.

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    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    9 comments

    Anyone in Ukraine who runs for public office these days would have to be crazy, for if they lose, they'll wind up like Tymoshenko -- in prison for who knows how long. This is how dictatorships are born (or reborn, as it were).

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  • 29
    Mar
    2012
    7:51am, EDT

    Gang-raped, strangled and set on fire: Teen dies in Ukraine hospital

    This YouTube video was uploaded by the Oksana Makar's mother. It has been reported that the 18-year-old calls for her attackers to be castrated.

    Watch on YouTube
    By msnbc.com staff and news services

    A teen who prosecutors say was gang-raped, strangled and then set on fire has died, a hospital official said on Thursday. Oksana Makar's case sparked public protests in Ukraine.

    Hundreds of people took to the streets earlier this month after police released two of 18-year-old Makar's three suspected attackers. Their parents reportedly had political connections and the move re-ignited a public debate on corruption in the ex-Soviet republic.


    Makar's plight gained further attention when her mother, Tetyana Surovitska, encouraged her to describe the ordeal in a video clip uploaded to YouTube.

    In the video Makar calls for her attackers to be castrated and imprisoned, according to local English language newspaper Kyiv Post. It named the suspects as Yevhen Krasnoschek, 23; Maksym Prisyazhnyuk, 24; and Artem Pogosyan, 22.

    The three were arrested, but two -- whose parents had political connections -- were released without charge. They were re-arrested after the intervention of President Viktor Yanukovich who sent an investigating team to the town of Mykolaiv in southern Ukraine.

    'Her heart activity stopped'
    Interior Minister Vitaly Zakharchenko confirmed earlier this month that the parents of at least one of the three suspects were former government officials in the Mykolaiv region.

    "Lung bleeding began and then her heart activity stopped," said Emil Fistal, head of the specialist burns unit whre Makar was taken for treatment. "We tried three times to revive her with defribillation."

    According to local media reports, Makar met two of the three accused in a bar on March 10. After spending some time there with them, she went to the apartment of the third.

    The reports say she was then raped and one of the suspected attackers tried to strangle her with a cord. They subsequently wrapped her in a blanket, took her to a pit on a building site and tried to set her body on fire before escaping.

    She was found by a passing motorist and taken to hospital with serious burns. She had both feet and an arm amputated in surgery, according to the reports.

    The Kyiv Post also published what it said was leaked video of one of the three suspects’ interrogation.

    In that clip, the suspect, apparently Krasnoschek, said he was only trying to burn a pillowcase they had accidentally taken with them.

    After disposing of Makar, the three suspects went to the supermarket to buy more vodka and, after that, stopped at a street kiosk for tea.

    The BBC reported there have been several protests in Mykolaiv and elsewhere in Ukraine, including Odessa and Kharkiv, about the case and its handling by authorities.

    Reuters and msnbc.com staff contributed to this report.

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    Follow us on Twitter: @msnbc_world

    271 comments

    So it don't only happen in the U.S., those with money and power can walk away from anything. Those of us with less better be willing to cop a plea bargain so we don't spend years in the prison system.

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  • 27
    Feb
    2012
    3:26am, EST

    Plot to kill PM Vladimir Putin foiled, pro-government TV channel reports

    Russia's security services say they averted a plot by Chechen separatists to assassinate Russian leader Vladimir Putin. The alleged conspiracy comes just a week before presidential elections and has brought criticism from Putin's opponents who suggest the timing of the announcement is suspicious. ITN's Lindsey Hilsum reports.

    By msnbc.com staff and news services

    Updated at 9:25 a.m. ET: MOSCOW -- Security forces have uncovered a plot to assassinate Russia's Vladimir Putin and have arrested suspects linked to a Chechen rebel leader known for other terror attacks, Russian state television reported Monday.

    Pro-government Channel One said that the suspects were plotting to kill Putin in Moscow immediately after the March 4 presidential election, in which he is all but certain to reclaim the presidency.


    The report, which included televised confessions by two suspects, is likely to boost support for Putin as he seeks his third term as president in an election Sunday.

    Channel One said the suspects were acting on instructions from Chechen warlord Doku Umarov and had been arrested in Ukraine's Black Sea port city of Odessa after an accidental explosion Jan. 4 while they were trying to manufacture explosives at a rented apartment.

    Amanda Walker, Moscow correspondent for Britain's Sky News, pointed out that Channel One was a "staunch Putin supporter."

     

    The Ukrainian Security Service said earlier this month it had detained a man sought by Russian authorities on charges of terrorism and two of his accomplices in Odessa on Feb. 4, but said nothing at the time about them being linked to an anti-Putin plot.

    Its spokeswoman, Marina Ostapenko, said Monday the announcement in Moscow came only now because the Russian special service was conducting its own investigation. She confirmed the main suspect was involved in a plot to kill Putin, but didn't elaborate.

    There was no immediate explanation for the different number of suspects cited by Russia and Ukraine.

    CHANNEL ONE/AFP/Getty Images

    An undated photograph taken from a Russian television report shows Ilya Pyanzin, who reportedly was conspiring to kill Vladimir Putin.

    Putin's spokesman Dmitry Peskov confirmed the report to the ITAR-Tass news agency, but refused to make any further comment.

    A laidback Yankee in trouble in Putin's court

    Channel One said two of the alleged members of the group arrived in Ukraine from the United Arab Emirates via Turkey with instructions from Umarov, the top military leader for the Chechen rebels. One of them, a Chechen, was killed during the accidental explosion in Odessa and another one, Kazakhstan citizen Ilya Pyanzin, was wounded in the blast and arrested.

    Pyanzin led the investigators to their contact in Odessa, Adam Osmayev, a Chechen who previously had lived in London and had been sought by Russia since 2007, the report said. The TV station showed footage of Osmayev's arrest in Odessa with black-clad special troops bursting in and a half-naked, bloodied Osmayev on his knees, his head bowed down.

    Speaking to Channel One from custody in Ukraine, Osmayev described the group's mission: "Our goal was to go to Moscow and try to kill Prime Minister Putin ... Our deadline was after the Russian presidential election."

    Both of Osmayev's hands were bandaged, and his face was covered in green dots from an antiseptic used to treat his cuts.

    Russians rally for Putin -- and 2 days off work

    Russian and Ukrainian special services wouldn't comment on the report.

    The report is likely to boost support for Putin as he seeks his third term as president in an election Sunday.

    But some Russians reacted to the news with skepticism, making clear on social network sites that they did not believe the report or suggesting the timing of the announcement was intended to attract sympathy for Putin before the election.

    Opinion polls show Putin, a former KGB officer who crushed separatists during a war he launched in the Chechnya region in the North Caucasus before he became president, will easily win the election and reclaim the post he held from 2000 until 2008.

    But he faces a growing opposition protest movement and wants to secure outright victory on Sunday, averting a runoff that might dent his authority.

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    The Associated Press, Reuters and msnbc.com staff contributed to this report.

    206 comments

    Not sure what msnbc has to do with this clebro? I would add that hopefully the citizens of Russia find a peaceful solution to getting Putin out of office. It sure doesn't look like the elections will represent the people's choice in the matter.

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