Yanukovych is Out

as Prime Minister. At least that’s how it looks at first glance. Apparently, President Kuchma must still approve the no-confidence vote. But this appears to be a concrete step.

The old apparat holds on, but with fewer fingers now.

This entry was posted in A Fistful Of Euros, Ukraine and tagged by Doug Merrill. Bookmark the permalink.

About Doug Merrill

Freelance journalist based in Tbilisi, following stints in Atlanta, Budapest, Munich, Warsaw and Washington. Worked for a German think tank, discovered it was incompatible with repaying US student loans. Spent two years in financial markets. Bicycled from Vilnius to Tallinn. Climbed highest mountains in two Alpine countries (the easy ones, though). American center-left, with strong yellow dog tendencies. Arrived in the Caucasus two weeks before its latest war.

4 thoughts on “Yanukovych is Out

  1. Heh 🙂

    Now, is the script of Kuchma nominating someone else in new elections and thus drawing out his own rule for up to six months the likely one?

  2. From the CNN article:

    Should the court order new elections instead of a repeat — favored by Kuchma, who backed Yanukovych — Ukrainian law would prevent either man from entering the race.

    Heh, tricky! Are they betting Tymoshenko would be a less popular candidate?

    In what appeared to be an attempt to seize back the political initiative, Yanukovych appealed to the court to declare the election results invalid, the court said Wednesday, The Associated Press reported.

    His campaign team accused the Central Election Commission, which last week declared him the winner, of “violating Ukrainian election laws,” Chief Justice Anatoliy Yarema said.

    Yanukovych’s side asked the court to order election officials to conduct a recount, saying the final result did not correspond with reality.

    What do you make of this?

Comments are closed.