11:51
11.3.2014
WATCH: RFE/RL's Ukraine Service live stream from Simferopol, Crimea:
11:58
11.3.2014
Moscow flights operate normally! MT @ddamned Back in Kiev after Simeropol refuses landing permit in #Crimea to #ukraine nat. carrier
— Nikolaus von Twickel (@niktwick) March 11, 2014
12:05
11.3.2014
Crimean PM Sergei Aksyonov: Our declaration of independence has been passed.
Приняли декларацию о Независимости.
— Сергей Аксенов (@sergyaksenov) March 11, 2014
12:25
11.3.2014
Kharkiv Mayor Hennadiy Kernes has been summoned to Ukraine's Prosecutor-General's Office for questioning as a supsect in unspecified criminal proceedings.
Kernes announced the summons himself, via Instagram. Ukraine's UNIAN news agency suggests that Kernes may face charges of attempted overthrow of constitutional order (Article 109 of the Ukrainian criminal code) and encroachment on Ukraine's territorial integrity (Article 110).
Mykhaylo Dobkin, the former Kharkiv governor, was detained March 10 on suspicion of violating Article 110. Kernes and Dobkin, both members of the Party of Regions, were earlier reported as attempting to flee Ukraine to seek shelter in Russia.
12:30
11.3.2014
Members of a pro-Russian "self-defense" unit in Crimea check a passenger's documents at the train station in Simferopol on March 11. Armbands, random stops, nationalism (albeit to a foreign power), thugs. Where have we seen this before?
12:51
11.3.2014
Nursultan Nazarbaev and U.S. President Barack Obama have discussed the situation in Ukraine in a telephone conversation.
A statement from the U.S. Embassy in Russia said the two leaders "reaffirmed their common interest in defining a peaceful settlement" that will nonetheless help "maintain the territorial integrity" of the country.
Nazarbaev has also held conversations with German Chancellor Angela Merkel and Russian President Vladimir Putin. As an energy superpower and a key member of Putin's much-desired Eurasian Union, is Nazarbaev looking like the West's inside man?
12:52
11.3.2014
My interview with Radio Ekho Moskvy:"..it’s a huge mistake to view #Ukraine through the lens of the 19th century.": http://t.co/WegCRqskI3
— Geoffrey Pyatt (@GeoffPyatt) March 11, 2014
13:24
11.3.2014
Peter Eltsov and Klaus Larres write in "New Republic" that Russia's de facto annexation of Crimea may naturally lead to Moscow biting off chunks of north Kazakhstan, with its large Russian-speaking population.
They write: "Nazarbaev is cautiously silent, but spontaneous protests in front of the Russian Consulate in Almaty... have not been disbanded by the police." They go on to note that Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, as the Soviet Union was falling, himself called for the creating of a new Russian state combining Russia, Ukraine, Belarus, and parts of Kazakhstan. "It is quite possible that President Putin wants his legacy to be the implementation of Solzhenitsyn's ideas... Putin is a great admirer and was a friend of Solzhenitsyn's."
13:38
11.3.2014
Fascinating "Daily Beast" piece from Kyiv, where Jamie Dettmer profiles Euromaidan's so-called inner Circle of Trust, which includes doctor Olha Bohomolets, Right Sector head Dmytro Yarosh, Oleh Mikhnyuk from the Afghan War Veterans, and Serhiy Poyarkov, an artist and Automaidan head who is increasingly worried that the current conflagration in Ukraine could derail Maidan's achievements and goals:
"Poyarkov has ventured into the hotel to meet with some foreign businessmen to deliver the message that there could be a 'new Maidan' if Ukraine’s embattled interim government doesn't start 'changing the system' in earnest. He and the others in the Circle of Trust want crooked judges ditched and the notoriously corrupt police reformed. They also want the speedy introduction of a lustration law, blocking officials from the kleptocracy of ousted President Viktor Yanukovych from occupying government posts and public office. Such a law would offer also a process to deal with past human-rights abuses and injustices."
"Poyarkov has ventured into the hotel to meet with some foreign businessmen to deliver the message that there could be a 'new Maidan' if Ukraine’s embattled interim government doesn't start 'changing the system' in earnest. He and the others in the Circle of Trust want crooked judges ditched and the notoriously corrupt police reformed. They also want the speedy introduction of a lustration law, blocking officials from the kleptocracy of ousted President Viktor Yanukovych from occupying government posts and public office. Such a law would offer also a process to deal with past human-rights abuses and injustices."
14:23
11.3.2014
A series of tweets from Ukrainian singer and Maidan stalwart Ruslana Lyzhychko:
Ruslana: #Putin has not change anything in KGB propaganda. It is still about fascists.#Ukraine
— uacrisis (@uacrisis) March 11, 2014
Ruslana: I ask to stop discussing and reacting on any statements of #Putin propaganda. #Ukraine
— uacrisis (@uacrisis) March 11, 2014
Ruslana: #Crimea is a part of #Ukraine. That is all.
— uacrisis (@uacrisis) March 11, 2014