Medvedev invites Ukraine president-elect to Moscow

Monday 1st March 2010

Russia invited Ukrainian president-elect Viktor Yanukovich recently to visit Moscow, aiming to consolidate improved relations with Kiev after years of acrimony under the outgoing president

President Dmitry Medvedev made the invitation in a letter to Yanukovich released by the Kremlin press service.

Ukraine's electoral commission confirmed Yanukovich's win over his rival Yulia Tymoshenko in a runoff on February 7, paving the way for his inauguration. Tymoshenko says she intends challenging the result in court.

If Yanukovich accepts the invitation, it could be his first foreign trip as president, reinforcing expectations that he will steer the former Soviet republic back towards Moscow's orbit.

In a pointed reference to outgoing President Viktor Yushchenko, Medvedev's letter said the election showed that Ukrainians "desired to end the historically doomed attempts to sow discord between the people of our countries".

Both Yanukovich and Tymoshenko said they wanted better relations with Moscow after five years of estrangement under Yushchenko, who was swept to power on a wave of anti-Russian sentiment and wanted Ukraine to join the EU and NATO.

Western leaders have also congratulated Yanukovich on his win and praised the poll for meeting democratic standards.

During campaigning, Yanukovich stressed the "historical partnership" of Ukraine and Russia that goes beyond strategic relations. But he has also promised to tackle the country's economic problems and move it closer to the EU.

Leave a comment

5 		stars5 stars5 stars5 stars5 stars
 4 stars4 stars4 stars4 stars4 stars
 3 stars3 stars3 stars3 stars3 stars
 2 stars2 stars2 stars2 stars2 stars
 1 star1 star1 star1 star1 star
Enter the words above:

International Articles

Article tools

Special Report

A man for three seasons

Berlusconi is back for the third time, sending affectionate kisses to Italians in his victory speech and promising to revive Italy's ailing economy and slash taxes. But of course, as many Italians will tell you, they have heard it all before...

Multimedia       

Information
CEO face

Talking telepresence

We talk to Geir Olsen EMEA President of TANDBERG about improvements in telepresence technology.
CEO face

The advantages of telepresence

21st century technology: real time telepresence meetings
CEO face

Real-Time communication

Peter Quinlan explains the manifold benefits of benefits of telepresence

Bulgarian squeeze

How the EU are putting pressure on the Eastern European country.

Open for business

How Ireland is timidly opening up to new investment strategies.

Danone a good job

We profile Franck Riboud, CEO Danone

Artistic investment

Investing in art can yield big dividends, we investigate the market for corporate acquisitions

CEO Profiles

Andrew Witty, GlaxoSmithKline

Andrew Witty, GlaxoSmithKline

GlaxoSmithKline have been pioneers of the pharmaceutical industry for more than twenty years now. What kind of person carries a beast like this?
Christophe Mueller, Aer Lingus

Christophe Mueller, Aer Lingus

CEO hopes to lift troubled Aer Lingus into the black despite huge union and staff anger about job cuts and pension worries
Lars Olofsson, Carrefour

Lars Olofsson, Carrefour

The Swede didn't walk into the hot-seat at Carrefour with booming share prices and investor confidence; but has achieved them since