KIEV, Ukraine (AP) —
Ukrainian protesters lambasted parliament on Thursday for its lack of
action, and a senior U.S. diplomat arrived in Kiev to try to help find a
resolution to the country's grinding political crisis.
Assistant
Secretary of State Victoria Nuland met separately with President Viktor
Yanukovych and with opposition leaders during her two-day stay in the
Ukrainian capital.
A statement
on Yanukovych's website said the president "emphasized that he would do
everything to prevent escalation of the conflict." There were no
immediate details about her meeting with the opposition figures.
Nuland's
visit comes amid growing frustration over parliament's failure to enact
constitutional reforms and an amnesty for protesters. The legislature
met three days this week, but produced no results and adjourned Thursday
until next week.
The U.S. and the European Union have called for Yanukovych and the opposition to reach a compromise and warned Yanukovych against using more force against the protesters. The massive demonstrations began in late November after the president spurned the EU in favor of getting a $15 billion loan from Russia to shore up his debt-ridden nation.
The European Parliament in Strasbourg, France, adopted a non-binding resolution Thursday urging the bloc's 28 nations to prepare targeted sanctions such as freezing assets of "Ukrainian officials, legislators and oligarchs personally responsible for the attacks on and deaths of protesters."
Three protesters were killed in clashes with police and another one was abducted and then found frozen to death.
Prosecutors
in Kiev, meanwhile, said a prominent opposition activist and
journalist, Tetyana Chernovil, who was severely beaten in December fell
victim to hooliganism, according to the Interfax news agency. Chernovil
links the attack to her stories exposing alleged high-level corruption
and her participation in the protests.
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