RFE/RL's Multimedia Department has issued this photo gallery from Debaltseve:
Destruction, And Signs Of Renewal, In Debaltseve
One year ago, Russia-backed separatists won control of the city of Debaltseve from Ukrainian government troops. The fighting left the city in ruins. Many residents fled, and those who remained have often struggled to survive without heat, running water, or reliable access to food. In the past year, some residents have reconstructed their homes and workplaces, but the work has only just begun. (RFE/RL photographer Petr Shelomovskiy)
Here's a longer news item from RFE/RL's Ukrainian Service on Yatsenyuk's woes:
Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko has asked the country's prime minister and prosecutor-general to resign "in order to restore trust in the government" ahead of a possible showdown with lawmakers.
A presidential statement said Prime Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk's government has lost the support of the ruling coalition, which includes Poroshenko's own party, the Poroshenko Bloc.
The February 16 request came shortly before Yatsenyuk was due to address parliament, where he faces the threat of a no-confidence vote.
Earlier on February 16, the Poroshenko Bloc announced it would vote in the parliament that the government’s work has been “unsatisfactory.”
That has raised the likelihood of a no-confidence vote against Yatsenyuk and the collapse of his government -- setting the stage for fresh coalition talks and possible early parliamentary elections, something that Poroshenko himself has warned "would only deepen the political crisis."
All of the parties that originally formed Yatsenyuk’s coalition support integration with the European Union and moves to steer the country away from economic and political ties with Russia.
Poroshenko also asked for the resignation of Prosecutor-General Viktor Shokin, a controversial appointment in 2014 who had also served in previous administrations.
Shokin was called out by name earlier this month by Lithuanian-born Economy Minister Aivaras Abromavicius, who announced his resignation and cited a "sharp escalation in efforts to block systemic and important reforms."
Yatsenyuk’s other coalition partners -- the Fatherland party of former Prime Minister Yulia Tymoshenko and the Self-Reliance party led by Lviv Mayor Andriy Sadovyy -- have already signaled they could vote against Yatsenyuk and his cabinet.
That would likely result in the 226 votes required to pass a no-confidence resolution.
The far-right Radical Party of Oleh Lyashko left the ruling coalition in September in a move that led to highly charged debates about Yatsenyuk’s government in December.
Even then, Yatsenyuk’s People’s Front faction was at odds with its partners from the group loyal to Poroshenko amid growing public discontent over still-rampant corruption in Ukraine.
During the December debates, as Yatsenyuk defended the work of his government, Poroshenko Bloc deputy Oleh Barna presented the prime minister with a bouquet of roses and then physically picked him up and pulled him from the podium -- leading to a fistfight on the parliamentary floor between members of the ruling coalition.
Despite the brawl, the Poroshenko Bloc continued in its tenuous alliance with Yatsenyuk’s People's Front into early 2016.
Poroshenko Bloc leader Yuriy Lutsenko later apologized to Yatsenyuk but said he personally supported Yatsenyuk’s resignation.
Three of Yatsenyuk's cabinet ministers in the past two months have announced plans to resign, including Abromavicius.
There are 450 seats in Ukraine’s parliament, the Verkhovna Rada, but only 422 deputies were seated after the October 2014 elections.
The other 28 seats have remained unfilled because there was no voting in Russian-occupied Crimea or in some constituencies in eastern Ukraine where Russia-backed separatists have been fighting government forces.
Yatsenyuk’s People’s Front now has 81 deputies in parliament.
Poroshenko Bloc has 136 seats, Self-Reliance has 26, Fatherland has 19, and the Radical Party has 19.
RFE/RL's Ukrainian Service has a live stream of a rally against embattled Prime Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk outside the parliament in Kyiv (natural sound):
This is what's coming in on the wires about Poroshenko's statement:
Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko has asked Prime Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk and Prosecutor-General Viktor Shokin to resign. "In order to restore trust in the government, the president asked the prosecutor general and the prime minister to quit," presidential spokesman Svyatoslav Tsegolko tweeted. (AFP, Reuters)