Viktor Yushchenko sings the Ukrainian national anthem
after taking the oath of office during his inauguration ceremony in the
Verkhovna Rada parliament, Kiev, Sunday, Jan. 23, 2005. (Xinhua photo)
Ukrainian President Viktor Yushchenko kisses the Bible
during his inauguration ceremony in Kiev yesterday.(Photo: Reuters)
Viktor Yushchenko was sworn in as Ukraine's new president Sunday, bringing an
end to months of political turmoil and uncertainty triggered by a presidential
election crisis.
The 50-year-old former banker took oath of office shortly afternoon Sunday
inside the parliament and showed his intentions later to push for Ukraine's
closer integration with the European Union.
"Our way to the future is the way of a united Europe. We, alongwith the
people of Europe, belong to one civilization. We share similar values,"
Yushchenko told a crowd of supports after the inauguration in a downtown square.
Ukraine's Central Election Commission formally declared Yushchenko the winner
of the presidential run-off on Jan. 10 with 51.99 percent of the vote, beating
then Prime Minister Viktor Yanukovych by 8 percentage points.
But Yanukovych raised a series of legal challenges to the re-vote, the last
of which was rejected by the high court on Thursday,paving the way for the
inauguration.
Yushchenko, who will become the third president of independent Ukraine, has
pledged to steer Ukraine on a new course, fighting corruption and forging closer
ties with the European Union while maintaining traditional good relations with
Russia.
Immediately after his inauguration, Yushchenko is expected to make a working
visit to Russia. Later in the week, the new president will visit Western and
Central Europe, according to Yushchenko's spokeswoman.