Former Czech president, Vaclav Klaus, has said he doesn't believe Ukraine will remain an integral country as Kiev pushes ahead with its military operations in the restive eastern regions.
Klaus made the
remarks in an interview with Austrian newspaper Tiroler Tageszeitung published on Sunday.The former
president (pictured below) added that he does not see an end to the crisis in
Ukraine’s restive eastern regions, where government troops have been fighting
pro-Russian forces since last April when Kiev launched a military operation to
silence protests there.
Klaus
accused Kiev authorities of not striving for a peaceful solution to resolve the
conflict in Ukraine’s eastern regions of Donetsk and Lugansk, as they have not
initiated any essential talks.
The
ex-Czech leader said that after all the thousands of dead and all the
destruction, "I cannot imagine that the original Ukraine can live
together in the future." In addition, Klaus accused the US and European
governments of having instigated the Ukrainian crisis at the end of 2013,
with Washington’s funding through non-governmental organizations (NGOs) of the
pro-EU protests in Ukraine.
Furthermore,
the former Czech president rejected claims that Moscow is behind the conflict,
saying the pressure came from the West. Klaus added that “From this point of
view, Russia is not guilty. Russian actions were, in my opinion, a reaction, a
forced move.”
A
political crisis erupted in Ukraine in November 2013 when the country’s then
President Viktor Yanukovych refrained from signing an Association Agreement
with the European Union in favor of closer ties with Moscow.
The
move sparked pro-EU protests, with its center in Kiev's Maidan Square, and
in February 2014, Ukraine’s then-president Viktor Yanukovych was ousted by
Western-backed groups. The ouster triggered in its turn pro-Russian protests in
the country’s southern and eastern regions.
In
a bid to crush the pro-Russian protests, Kiev launched military operation in
mid-April last year causing deadly clashes in the country’s two mainly
Russian-speaking regions of Donetsk and Lugansk in eastern Ukraine.
Violence
intensified last May after the two flashpoint regions held local referendums in
which their residents voted overwhelmingly in favor of independence from
Ukraine. The votes came just two months after the country’s Black Sea peninsula
of Crimea voted in a referendum to breakvaway and rejoin the Russian
Federation. March 9, 2015 8:24AM PTV.
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