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We're leaving. No, you're not. That's where the crisis in Ukraine stood Thursday
after lawmakers in Crimea voted in favor of leaving the country for Russia and putting
it to a regional vote in 10 days. This act drew widespread condemnation, with
Ukrainian interim Prime Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk calling such a referendum "an illegitimate
decision." "Crimea was, is and will be an integral part
of Ukraine," he said. It was a sentiment echoed by several world
leaders, who called the scheduled vote and possible pullout violations of Ukrainian and
international law. "Any discussion about the future of Ukraine
must include the legitimate government of Ukraine," said U.S. President Barack Obama.
"In 2014, we are well beyond the days when borders can be redrawn over the heads of democratic
leaders." It's not clear how easily the region could
split off from Ukraine even if the referendum endorses the move.
The developments came at a dizzying pace Thursday as Yatsenyuk joined emergency talks in Brussels,
Belgium, called by leaders of the European Union who support the Kiev government and
want to de-escalate the crisis. The EU and the United States announced plans
to freeze the assets of Viktor Yanukovych, who was ousted as Ukraine's president after
he turned his back on a trade deal with the EU in favor of one with Russia.
The rejected trade deal prompted months of protests that culminated in February with
bloody street clashes that left dozens dead and Yanukovych out of office.
Interpol said it is reviewing a request by Ukrainian authorities that would allow for
the arrest of Yanukovych on charges of abuse of power and ***, an allegation tied to
the death of protesters. Moscow has denounced the events that led to
Yanukovych's ouster as an illegitimate coup and has refused to recognize the new Ukrainian
authorities, putting the two countries on a collision course over control of the Crimea,
a peninsula on the Black Sea that has long ties to Russia and has thousands of Russian
troops stationed there. Russian President Vladimir Putin has insisted
he has the right to use military force in Ukraine if necessary to protect ethnic Russians
under threat in Crimea. Ukrainian officials say no such threat exists and say Putin is
using it as a pretext to control the region. As the standoff continued, Ukrainian authorities
announced the arrest Thursday of a leader of a pro-Russian movement in the eastern city
of Donetsk. Authorities said he is a Ukrainian national named Pavlo Gubarev, a self-proclaimed
governor of Donetsk. In Crimea, worlds collide