Police, protesters clash near parliament:
By RFE/RL's Ukrainian Service
KYIV -- Police and protesters have clashed near the Ukrainian parliament, where lawmakers discussed legislation on the "reintegration" of regions held by Russia-backed separatists.
The clashes on January 16 started after some of the protesters torched tires and burned a Russian flag in an area near the Verkhovna Rada and a tent camp set up by antigovernment protesters last year.
Police and firefighters extinguished the burning tires and threw them toward the tent camp. Law enforcement officers also used a chemical spray during the confrontation.
Ukraine's national police reported that one officer had been wounded in the scuffles, and one protester had been taken into custody.
Kyiv police said earlier that more than 3,800 officers were deployed near government buildings and the parliament ahead of the session in the Rada, Ukraine's single-chamber parliament. They greatly outnumbered the few dozen protesters.
Demonstrators want lawmakers to swiftly pass a "reintegration" bill that states that Russia -- which controls Crimea and backs separatists who have held parts of the Luhansk and Donetsk provinces in eastern Ukraine since 2014 -- is an aggressor.
Hotly Contested
The bill has been a hotly contested issue even before it passed in a first reading in October, amid scuffles between lawmakers. Opponents of the bill are displeased because they say it uncouples the issue of Russian-occupied Crimea and the conflict in eastern Ukraine, and could lead to the restoration of trade with the territories under the control of the Russia-backed separatists because it does not include language to support the current ban, Rada Deputy Speaker and Samopomich (Self Reliance) party member Oksana Syroyid told Channel 5 news.
President Petro Poroshenko reluctantly cut all but humanitarian trade with the separatist-held parts of the region known as the Donbas in March 2017, under pressure from nationalist activists who had blocked rail and road routes between the two sides. The controversial move has made life even more difficult for those civilians living in the war-torn area, according to humanitarian groups.
Yuriy Boyko, leader of the Opposition Bloc, formerly the Party of Regions, claimed the bill "contradicts all international agreements and treaties" that Ukraine is party to in regard to solving the conflict, notably the February 2015 deal known as the Minsk accord.
Language regarding the Minsk accord, which has been criticized for not producing a lasting cease-fire -- let alone peace -- since it was signed, was removed after much debate ahead of the first reading of the bill.
Supporters of the bill, including lawmakers from the president’s ruling party and the People’s Front party of former prime minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk, say it is necessary for the defense of the country, the possible expansion of international sanctions against the Kremlin, for the peace process, and potential compensation for losses stemming from Russia’s military actions.
“Legislative recognition of these facts will extend to the Kremlin the international legal obligations of the invader,” Yatsenyuk said on Facebook on January 15.
The parliament said earlier that lawmakers might also discuss a bill on the creation of a Supreme Anticorruption Court, which President Petro Poroshenko proposed last month amid rallies demanding the adoption of such a law.
'IMF Letter'
The creation of an anticorruption court has been one of the International Monetary Fund's (IMF) conditions for Ukraine to qualify for the next loan tranche of around $2 billion.
However, the online newspaper Ukrayinska Pravda reported on January 15 that the IMF has told Poroshenko's administration that it did not support the bill in its current form because it would not guarantee the court's independence.
Ukrayinska Pravda published what it said was the text of a January 11 letter from the IMF mission chief for Ukraine, Ron van Rooden, in which he wrote that the IMF has "serious concerns about the draft law."
"Several provisions are not consistent with the authorities' commitments under Ukraine's IMF-supported program," the letter said.
The IMF and other backers have repeatedly urged Ukraine to step up its fight against corruption. Western governments say tackling graft is crucial to curbing Russian influence.
Progress on reforms has been stalled since 2016, raising concerns in Ukraine and the West that little will be done ahead of presidential and parliamentary elections in 2019.
With reporting by Reuters and Ukrayinska Pravda
Conflict has increased spread of HIV in "silent epidemic":
By RFE/RL
The conflict in eastern Ukraine has increased the spread of HIV throughout the country as people have been uprooted by the violence, a new study finds.
Areas such as Donetsk and Luhansk, two large cities in the east deeply affected by the violence that erupted in 2014, were the main exporters of the HIV virus to other parts of the country such as Kyiv and Odesa, the report published on January 15 in the U.S. journal PNAS found.
Ukraine has among the highest HIV rates in Europe, with an estimated 220,000 infected in a country of about 45 million.
The study says the HIV crisis in Ukraine has become a "silent epidemic" because half of HIV-infected people are unaware they have the infection, and around 40 percent of newly diagnosed people are in the later stages of the disease.
To produce the study, an international team of scientists led by Oxford University and Public Health England analyzed viral migration patterns in Ukraine from 2012 to 2015. They found a correlation between the movement of 1.7 million people uprooted by the war and the spread of HIV.
"The war changed a lot of things in Ukraine and the HIV epidemic is one of them," lead author Tetyana Vasylyeva of Oxford University's zoology department said.
"When we conducted our analysis, we were able to show that the viral spread from the east to the rest of the country had been intensified after the war."
The HIV epidemic has shifted from being associated with drug injections in the 1990s to most new infections now being spread by sexual transmission, the study found.
The study also found an alarmingly high resistance, compared to the rest of Europe, to pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP), a common treatment for HIV, senior author and medical virologist Gkikas Magiorkinis said.
"It's a worrying development and the policymakers should be alerted because it's going to be very, very difficult to use it [PrEP] in the near future in Ukraine," Magiorkinis said.
Ukraine needs to scale up interventions to prevent further transmissions of HIV, and seek international support to prevent a new public health tragedy, he said.
The study's findings are in line with previous research on the spread of HIV in the West, which was shown to have mirrored geopolitical events.
Almost 37 million people worldwide have the human immunodeficiency virus that causes AIDS.
Since the first cases of HIV were reported more than 35 years ago, 35 million people have died from AIDS-related illnesses according to the United Nations AIDS program.
Ukraine's war with Russia-backed separatists in the industrialized east broke out in 2014 and has caused the death of more than 10,300 people.
Russia denies that it supports Ukrainian separatists with troops and weapons. (w/Reuters, Xinhua, Eurekalert.org)
This ends our live blogging for January 15. Be sure to check back tomorrow for our continuing coverage.