Ukraine PM to stick to austerity despite Moscow pressure

Yatseniuk concedes it would be very difficult to undo Russia’s annexation of Crimea

Ukrainian prime minister Arseny Yatseniuk during an interview with news agency Reuters in Kiev yesterday. Photograph: Valentyn Ogirenko/Reuters
Ukrainian prime minister Arseny Yatseniuk during an interview with news agency Reuters in Kiev yesterday. Photograph: Valentyn Ogirenko/Reuters

The Kiev government will stick to unpopular austerity measures "as the price of independence" as Russia steps up pressure on Ukraine to destabilise it, including by raising the price of gas, prime minister Arseny Yatseniuk has said.

Yatseniuk (39), who stepped in as interim prime minister last month after Viktor Yanukovich and his ministers fled the "Euromaidan" protests, conceded it would be very difficult "under the current Russian presence" to undo what he described as Russia's "international crime" in seizing Crimea.

But he said Ukraine would never recognise the Russian takeover in exchange for re-establishing good relations.

“I want to be perfectly clear. We will never recognise the annexation of Crimea... The time will come when Ukraine will take over control of Crimea,” he told Reuters, speaking in English, seated in his cavernous, Soviet-built government headquarters beneath the blue and yellow Ukrainian flag.

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He has called himself the leader of a “kamikaze” government, doomed by unpopular austerity measures it must take, but he said Ukraine would stick to the measures which include doubling gas prices for domestic consumers from May 1st and holding down state pensions and salaries against a background of a 3 per cent contraction of the economy and double-digit inflation.

IMF support - a $14-18 billion financial lifeline in return for tough economic reforms - would be a “tremendous step forward”, he said.

“We will regain trust and credibility from foreign investors. This is the roadmap for Ukraine,” he added.

The Kiev government has said that without the IMF-mandated austerity measures, the economy could shrink by up to 10 per cent this year.

Mr Yatseniuk, a former economy minister, lawyer and economist by education, has often been regarded as too aloof and intellectual to be a contender for high office in Ukraine, which he told the Kyiv Post newspaper in December 2012 was “because I’m bald and wear glasses”.

Like most of the former opposition leaders, he had difficulty connecting with the thousands of angry Ukrainians massed on Kiev’s Independence Square - the Maidan - during the three months of protests that finally toppled Mr Yanukovich.

But he is also working hard to improve his image at home, especially by reaching out to the Russian-speaking population, which is concentrated in the east and south of the country and seen as fertile ground for Russian troublemakers to foment unrest against the Kiev government.

Commentators say he also impressed western leaders during visits to Washington and Brussels last month with his clear-sightedness.

When asked about the support Kiev was getting from the West in dealing with Russia after the Crimean annexation, he replied. “Is the world ready for World War Three? I am absolutely sure it is not ready.”

He said that though western sanctions against Russia - which were limited to targeted travel and financial restrictions against a list of individuals and a few businesses - were understandable, they had allowed Russia to apply stronger pressure.

This took the form of trade pressure as well as incitement of unrest among the Russian-speaking population to undermine and destabilise the central government.

Referring to Moscow’s move yesterday to raise the gas price for Ukraine for a second time in a week, Mr Yatseniuk said: “There is no reason why Russia would raise the gas price for Ukraine ... other than one - politics. We expect Russia to go further in terms of pressure on the gas front, including limiting gas supplies to Ukraine. They press, press, press,” he said.

The subtext of Russia’s message to Ukraine’s Russian-speaking population, he said, was that they would enjoy higher living standards in Russia, with higher wages and better pensions and without the austerity that the Kiev government was now offering.

“They’re saying: if you go to Russia, you’ll be happy, smiling, and not living in a western hell,” he said.

“They [the Russians] are trying to compensate [for the western sanctions]. But we can pay the price of independence,” he said, with financial support from the West.

Mr Yatseniuk portrayed Moscow's annexation of Crimea as part of a wider plan by Russian president Vladimir Putin to reimpose control over states that were previously under the control of the Soviet Union.

He said the seizure of Crimea, along with Russia's war with another ex-Soviet republic, Georgia, in 2008, was part of this wider plan.

He recalled Mr Putin’s comment in 2005 that the biggest geopolitical disaster of the last century was the collapse of the Soviet Union.

“My quote is this,” he said. “The biggest disaster of this century would be the resurrection of the Soviet Union. This is his idea. This is his goal.”

Reuters