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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)

16:44 28.3.2014
News agencies are reporting that families of the people who lost their lives during antigovernment protests in Kyiv will receive financial compensation.
The Ukrainian government on Friday approved a proposal from Prime Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk that the family of each victim be given the equivalent of $10,000.

In additional, survivors, including children, will be given monthly payments of 5,000 hryvnyas ($440) as of April 1.

The payments will be given to the families of all victims of the violence, including both demonstrators and police.

According to the latest data, 104 people died in the three-month standoff that led to ouster of President of Viktor Yanukovych in late February.
17:33 28.3.2014
17:39 28.3.2014
So, if Russia cancels its basing agreements with Ukraine because it considers Crimea part of Russia, the presence of troops in Crimea is now illegal? Wasn't it already? And then there's the annexation of the region itself...
18:00 28.3.2014

19:28 28.3.2014
Dissent in Putin's Russia:
20:29 28.3.2014
A little bit of historical symmetry? Today is the 160th anniversary of Britain and France officially opening hostilities with Russia, thereby entering the Crimean War:
20:51 28.3.2014
21:01 28.3.2014
In this week's "Power Vertical Podcast," Brian Whitmore and his guests discuss whether the "collective Putin" model has given way to good old-fashioned autocracy in Russia.
21:07 28.3.2014
Daisy Sindelar looks at the self-organized security patrols being organized by Crimean Tatars in the Crimean capital, Simferopol.

Here's a video (in Russian) of the patrols in action:
Tatar Night Patrols In Simferopol's Akhmechet Neighborhood
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21:31 28.3.2014
From the agencies, via our news desk:
U.S. President Barack Obama has called on Russia to withdraw its troops from the area of the Ukrainian border and to become a "responsible international citizen." Obama was speaking in an interview with CBS News Friday before leaving Rome. He said Russian troops massing along the border with Ukraine "under the guise of military exercises" should be moved back. Obama again encouraged Russia to open a dialogue with the new government in Ukraine to deescalate the tensions that have been developing since former Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych was ousted from power at the end of February and pro-Russian forces entered Ukraine's Crimean Peninsula. Obama also said he believes Russian President Vladimir Putin has been acting in part from a "deeply held grievance about what he considers the loss of the Soviet Union." (CBS News, Reuters)

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