A new governing coalition has been formed yesterday in Ukraine's long
deadlocked parliament, announced Volodymyr Lytvyn after the chamber elected him
as the chairman.
The coalition, made up of groups led by Ukrainian President Viktor
Yushchenko, Prime Minister Yulia Tymoshenko and the new speaker, holds up to 248
seats in the 450-member assembly.
Lytvyn announced the formation of the coalition minutes after he was elected,
with backing from 244 lawmakers, including 27 communists.
"A formal coalition agreement will be signed within days," Lytvyn told
reporters, indicating that Tymoshenko should stay on as the prime minister.
"Clearly, there will be proposals from the coalition on the make-up of the
government. I see no legal grounds for substantial changes in the government
and, first and foremost, (the office of)the prime minister," he said.
However, Yushchenko's "Our Ukraine-People's Self-Defense" bloc said in a
statement published on its website yesterday evening that the draft of the
coalition agreement was signed by Boris Tarasyuk, a deputy leader of the
faction, without the consent of the faction.
"Lytvyn announced (the formation of the coalition) too early," said Andrew
Paruby, a lawmaker of the "Our Ukraine-People's Self-Defense" bloc.
"Our Ukraine-People's Self-Defense" withdrew from the 9-month-old coalition
in September after Tymoshenko's party sided with the opposition Party of Regions
to pass several laws to trim presidential powers.
Yushchenko announced the dissolution of parliament in early October and
called a snap election after talks on rebuilding a new coalition proved futile.
But he had to postpone the plan under the threat of the spreading international
financial crisis.