Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
ABC News
ABC News
National

Ukraine protests: Before and after photos from Kiev's battle zone

Fresh violence has erupted this week in the Ukrainian capital Kiev, where anti-government protesters have been occupying the centre of the city for almost three months.

Click or tap our five interactive photos to see how the protests have turned the city's Independence Square into a battle zone.

Looking at the centrepiece statue in Kiev's Independence Square. / An aerial view shows Independence Square during clashes between anti-government protesters and Interior Ministry members and riot police in central Kiev February 19, 2014. Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovich warned his opponents on Wednesday that he could deploy force against them after what he called their attempt to "seize power" by means of "arson and murder".

The protests started late in 2013 after Ukrainian president Viktor Yanukovych spurned a European trade and political deal and instead sealed a $15 billion bailout from Russia.

They have since transformed into a broader protest movement, with demonstrators calling for the president to resign over claims of corruption and his close ties to Russia.

The statue of the Archangel Michael looking down on Kiev's Independence Square. / Anti-government protesters clash with the police on Independence Square in Kiev early on February 19, 2014. Protesters braced on February 19 for a fresh assault by riot police in central Kiev after a day of clashes left at least 25 people dead in the worst violence since the start of Ukraine's three-month political crisis. As dawn rose over Kiev's battered city centre, protesters hurled paving stones and Molotov cocktails at lines of riot police that had pushed into the heart of the devastated protest camp on Independence Square.

Protesters armed with rocks, petrol bombs, bricks - and some with guns - have been fighting running battles with riot police, who replied with water canons, stun grenades and rubber bullets.

At least 26 people have been killed in fighting on Kiev's streets, 10 of them police officers.

Mr Yanukovych now says he has agreed to a "truce" with opposition leaders and a start to negotiations to prevent further bloodshed.

The view of Independence Square in the Bulgarian capital of Kiev. / An aerial view shows Independence Square during clashes between anti-government protesters and Interior Ministry members and riot police in central Kiev February 19, 2014. Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovich warned his opponents on Wednesday that he could deploy force against them after what he called their attempt to "seize power" by means of "arson and murder".

The Ukrainian crisis is also becoming a new fault line between Russia and the West, as Russian president Vladimir Putin seeks to re-assert his country's influence over former Soviet republics.

Russia says the world is witnessing a fascist coup, with foreign minister Sergei Lavrov blaming the West for encouraging opposition radicals "to act outside of the law".

The steps of Independence Square in Kiev. / Anti-government protesters walk near a barricade in Independence Square in central Kiev February 19, 2014. Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovich accused pro-European opposition leaders on Wednesday of trying to seize power by force after at least 26 people died in the worst violence since the former Soviet republic gained independence.

United States president Barack Obama has said the US is "watching very carefully".

"We expect the Ukrainian government to show restraint, to not resort to violence in dealing with peaceful protesters. There will be consequences if people step over the line."

A street corner in the Ukrainian capital of Kiev. / An anti-government protester uses a slingshot during clashes with police.

Russia analyst and author Ben Judah says Ukraine is teetering on the edge of not only an economic abyss but also civil war.

"History is littered with protest movements that once had the most peaceful intentions that turned bloody, of shootings in cities in multi-ethnic countries, even though nobody wanted it, it managed to spiral into confrontations.

"Currently a full-scale war is unlikely to break out but what seems to have happened is that with these shootings, regions in western Ukraine and regions in southern Ukraine that are supportive of Russia are no longer fully responding to the government's orders and it's going to be very hard to put Ukraine fully together again, whatever happens, without one region or another refusing to take orders from a central government."

Credits

  • Reporting/Production: Tim Leslie, Matthew Liddy
  • Design/Photo post-production: Ben Spraggon
  • Development: Simon Elvery
Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.