Can we limit the passive aggressiveness a little? No point in making this thread a literary equivalent of the situation on the ground.
I think punishment of everyone responsible for deaths
...
Yanukovich is impotent, not retarded.
He would have realized that, if people were to get shot, there would inevitably be an escalation of violence. Which may eventually lead to him dying. So, he probably didn't give orders to shoot people.
And your people probably realize that, too. Of course, it's too convenient an excuse for an escalation to pass up, right?
Actually, in many situations using violence against protestors has worked. The recent Arabian spring was somewhat of an inversion, but in general, the regime that brings out the big guns survives. After all, in most of these regimes the government has a bigger supply of violence than the protestors.((Additionally, at no point UR suggested that Yanukovich gave the order to fire at protestors. In fact, he mentioned Yanukovich4s resignation as a separate point, heavily implying that the mere violence investigation won't be enough to get rid of him.))
Also the escalation of violence agreement can be brought back all the way to the earliest protests, when government troops dispersed a then minor group of pro-European protestors.
On a side note, were the deaths people shot with real or rubber bullets? Can't find any conclusive evidence on that.
So, what is the point of radical core then? I just don't get it. To me, they sound like "down with Yanukovich, then... fuck that, down with Yanukovch"
I think punishment of everyone responsible for deaths and immediate resignation of Yanukovich is the minimum to stop ongoing protests. Too many deaths for "OK, let's return to pre-protests situation and run elections"
So... and who is going to rule the country meanwhile? Just promise that there will be no banners holding swasticas over Ukraine. Again.
Interim government. Internationally supervised elections. Stuff like that.
Really, the importance of federal governments to rule a country is often overstated. Most countries can survive for a while without one.