An excerpt:
The current government of Ukraine has taken a nation that was once ranked 13th in the world as the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic in 1989, a nation with G20 economic potential, a nation with close to 50 percent of the former USSR's industry and military-industrial complex, a nation in which the USSR and Russia had invested close to $100 billion, a nation that is one of only nine countries with a civil aviation industry and one of only seven countries that regularly launches satellites, a nation with more than one-fourth of the world's fertile black soil, a nation with more than enough energy and mineral resources for self-sufficiency – and somehow managed to turn it into sub-Saharan Africa.
We are now getting dangerously close to the point of no return.
If the Minsk II peace agreement holds, and Ukraine implements the requirements of the agreement specifically related to the special status of the Donbas and decentralization of administrative functions, and, further, Ukraine restores its economic and trade relations with Russia, Ukraine can begin the long process of reconciliation and rebuilding.
If the Minsk agreement fails, Ukraine will continue along the path of economic collapse and disintegration as a state, likely resulting in the Yugoslavian scenario wherein Ukraine is divided up into several semi-autonomous states with borders close to the individual regions before they were added to Ukraine.
The longer the civil war continues, and the more civilian casualties incurred in the Donbas, the harder it will be to reconcile this region with the EuroMaidan Kyiv regime.
Pro-independence sentiment is growing not only in the regions of Donetsk and Lugansk, but also in the Kharkov, Dnepropetrovsk, and Odesa oblasts – that is, in the entire region of Novorossiya.
Yanukovych's younger son reported dead in accident in Russia
KIEV, Ukraine (AP) -- An associate of Ukraine's deposed president says the former leader's son has died in an accident in which a vehicle plunged through the ice on Lake Baikal in Russia.
Nestor Shufrych, a deputy in Ukraine's parliament, said Sunday in a statement on Facebook that the 33-year-old Viktor Yanukovych, who had the same name as his father, was driving at the time of his death. He gave no further details.
Russian authorities haven't identified the driver who died Friday when a minibus carrying six people crashed through thin ice on the Siberian lake or confirmed reports that it was Yanukovych's son. The five passengers survived.
The former president has lived in Russia since being toppled from power last year. He also has an older son, 41-year-old Alexander, a wealthy businessman.
Top British Diplomat: ‘Russia Must Return Crimea To Ukraine
By RFE/RL
Britain’s top diplomat says Russia "must return Crimea to Ukraine," calling the Kremlin’s forcible annexation of the Black Sea peninsula last year "completely unacceptable."
"The annexation of Crimea was illegal and illegitimate in March 2014, and remains illegal and illegitimate in March 2015," British Foreign Secretary Philip Hammond said in March 22 comments posted on the British Foreign & Commonwealth Office’s website.
Russia annexed Crimea from Ukraine after sending troops there and staging a secession referendum on March 16, 2014, that was declared illegal in an overwhelming vote in the UN.
Hammond called the referendum a "sham" and a "fig leaf" for Russian President Vladimir Putin’s "land grab."
Putin said on March 18 that the annexation was necessary to protect ethnic Russians in Crimea and reclaim Russia’s "historic roots."
That concludes our live-blogging of the Ukraine crisis for today. Check back here on Monday morning for more of our continuing coverage.
By RFE/RL
Ukrainian authorities say a son of former President Viktor Yanukovych has died after a minivan he was driving plunged into Russia's Lake Baikal.
Anton Herashchenko, a lawmaker and aide to Ukrainian Interior Minister Arsen Avakov, said on Facebook on March 22 that the ousted former leader's younger son, also named Viktor, "died tragically today."
He said the minivan Yanukovych was driving plunged through ice and sank in the Siberian lake after falling over onto the driver's side.
Herashchenko said all five passengers in the minivan survived and "four of them didn't even get their feet wet."
Nestor Shufrych, a Ukrainian parliament deputy from the Opposition Bloc, gave a similar account on Facebook.
There was no confirmation from Russian authorities.
The younger Yanukovych, 33, was reportedly going by the name of Viktor Davydov.
The senior Yanukovych and most of his family have lived in Russia since was he chased from office in February 2014 after months of protests over his decision to reject a deal tightening ties with the EU and turn toward Moscow.
With reporting by Interfax, AP, BBC, Dozhd, and SiberianTimes.com
Far-right figures from Europe and the United States and nationalist supporters of Russian President Vladimir Putin criticized the West at a forum in St. Petersburg.
Participants at the Russian International Conservative Forum on March 22 condemned Western governments' stances on the conflict in Ukraine and praised what they described as Moscow's efforts to promote "traditional values."
Nick Griffin, the expelled former leader of the anti-immigrant British National Party, Udo Voigt, a senior figure in Germany's neo-Nazi fringe National Democratic Party, and members of the neo-Nazi Greek party Golden Dawn were among some 200 participants.
Griffin said that U.S. leaders "and their puppets in the European Union are doing everything they can...to drag us into a terrible war" between government forces and Russian-backed separatists in eastern Ukraine.
The gathering, which was halted by what authorities said was a bomb threat, drew criticism inside and outside Russia.
Russian opposition leader Aleksei Navalny wrote on Twitter: "The fascists have strangely and very quickly turned into Russia's friends."
Dozens of antifascist activists protested against the forum, and police detained eight of them.