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Ukrainian acting Prime Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk (right) welcomes U.S. Vice President Joe Biden before their meeting in Kyiv today.
Ukrainian acting Prime Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk (right) welcomes U.S. Vice President Joe Biden before their meeting in Kyiv today.

Live Blog: Ukraine In Crisis (Archive)

18:39 2.4.2014
From our news desk, U.S. details charges against Ukrainian oligarch:
U.S. prosecutors have accused Ukrainian businessman Dmytro Firtash and five other people of being part of an international racketeering conspiracy in which millions of dollars of bribes were paid to Indian officials to secure titanium-mining licenses.

The U.S. Justice Department unveiled the indictment against Firtash on Wednesday. It says that beginning in 2006, the suspects conspired to pay more than $18 million in bribes to secure mining contracts in India's Andra-Pradesh state.

Firtash was arrested last month in Vienna on an U.S. warrant, but the allegations against him were not immediately divulged. He was released on a record 125 million-euro ($172 million) bail on promises he will not leave Austria. The other five suspects remain at large.

Firtash was a supporter of ousted Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych.
18:12 2.4.2014
17:39 2.4.2014
17:17 2.4.2014
From our news desk, Washington suspending bilateral projects with Moscow:
The United States says it has temporarily suspended "several" bilateral projects with Russia and will hand over funding for the initiatives to Ukraine. A statement published on the State Department website says the decision was made "in response to recent events."

Washington has repeatedly condemned Russia’s annexation of Ukraine’s Crimea as illegal and imposed sanctions on Russians linked to the move. The Obama administration has also warned of further measures.

The State Department statement said the projects being suspended included initiatives planned under the U.S.-Russia Bilateral Presidential Commission, as well as "some cooperative law enforcement activities." No further details were given.

The statement said funding for the projects would be added to U.S. assistance to Ukraine to support economic reform, combat corruption, and recover stolen assets.
17:05 2.4.2014
"Our friend who lives not far from a military unit said that Russian soldiers cast their votes at an election stations. This was nothing but fabrication. Have you seen the video showing a Russian citizen who was allowed to vote? 97 % for accesion to Russia is unreal, and even not consistent with the reality at all. My Ukrainian neighbour failed to cast her vore as well. There are 14 % of Crimean Tatars, she said, but we are actually more in number. A lot of people were out of town, which also should be taken into account."
16:35 2.4.2014
15:44 2.4.2014
The U.S. ambassador to Ukraine has tweeted this on the U.S. aid package for the country:
15:28 2.4.2014
Meanwhile, in Brussels, NATO's secretary-general has had this to say:
NATO Secretary-General Anders Fogh Rasmussen says it would be an "a historic mistake" if Russia intervened further in Ukraine after it annexed Crimea.

Rasmussen also said Russia's military buildup on the Ukrainian border remains a "grave concern."

He was speaking after a NATO foreign ministers meeting in Brussels today.
15:23 2.4.2014
In Moscow, NATO 's recent statements seem to have been ruffling some feathers:
Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov has expressed concern to U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry about NATO's decision to suspend cooperation with Moscow.

The Russian Foreign Ministry says the two top diplomats, in a telephone conversation today, also discussed possibilities for international cooperation in the crisis over Ukraine but gave no details.

Yesterday, NATO foreign ministers said they were suspending "all practical civilian and military cooperation" with Russia in protest at its annexation of Ukraine's Crimea.

NATO also said it will intensify cooperation and help improve Ukraine's military capabilities through training and other programs.

The alliance said it would also look at ways to enhance collective defense, including through the possible deployment or reinforcement of military assets in eastern NATO members such as Poland and the Baltic states.

A Russian Foreign Ministry spokesman Aleksandr Lukashevich said the NATO statements resemble the "verbal jousting of the Cold War era. "
15:19 2.4.2014

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