Ukrainian protesters blockaded the main government building today, trying to bring down President Viktor Yanukovich with a general strike after hundreds of thousands demonstrated against his decision to abandon an EU integration pact.

Demonstrations on Saturday and yesterday, which saw violent clashes with the police, drew as many as 350,000 people, the biggest public rally in the ex-Soviet state since the "orange revolution" overturned a stolen election nine years ago.

Yanukovich's decision to abandon a trade pact with the European Union and instead seek closer economic ties with Russia has stirred deep passions in a country where many people yearn to join the European mainstream and escape Moscow's orbit.

"We have no other choice but to defend ourselves and the gains we have made," said Taras Revunets, a protester at Kiev's city hall, which hundreds of demonstrators occupied on Sunday and have turned into an operational hub.

He said the protesters could not rule out a government military crackdown, but were prepared to endure it.

Ukraine is divided between those who see stability in close ties with Russia and those who look westwards and see a more prosperous future with the European Union. Since election in February 2010, Yanukovich has sought to straddle the divide, reassuring Ukrainians he could pursue close ties with Europe while managing relations with Moscow.

Even some supporters were shocked by the abruptness with which his government announced it was suspending work on a long-awaited pact with the EU in favour of reviving economic ties with Russia. Scenes over the weekend of police beating demonstrators hardened opinion against him.

"Yanukovich will do whatever (Russian President Vladimir) Putin tells him to do," said Oleksander, 49, on Kiev's Independence Square, where protesters are establishing tented camps to dig in for a long campaign.

"He's been losing his legitimacy for a long time. His decision to send police in to beat up children was the last straw," said Oleksander, adding he had voted for Yanukovich in the past and had joined the president's Party of the Regions.

Thousands of protesters listened to music and strolled through the city centre on Monday behind makeshift barricades they had erected overnight from city benches, commandeered police barriers and parts of a giant artificial Christmas tree.

Traffic was cut off in central Kiev but pedestrians still shopped and walked to work. Opposition figures made speeches at a central stage erected across from Independence Square. Orthodox Christian priests said prayers for the injured.

Police, who clashed with protesters at several spots around Independence Square at the weekend, have since withdrawn and were little in evidence in the city centre today.

Yesterday, riot police had used tear gas, stun grenades and batons to disperse crowds in clashes near the main presidential administration building and battled masked protesters trying to pull down a monument to Soviet state founder Vladimir Lenin.

GENERAL STRIKE

Yanukovich's government struggled to show today that it was still functioning, with protesters blocking the approach road to the main government building with trash bins and other obstacles and many employees turned back home.

Former interior minister Yuri Lutsenko, now an opposition figure, said: "What is happening now around the government building is a strike."

The National Bank and the finance and economy ministries were functioning, their press services said. City authorities, whose central premises were still in the hands of protesters, said basic services including public transport and hospitals were working normally in the city of three million.

Ukraine's debt insurance costs surged to the highest in more than two months. Its dollar bonds tumbled.

There was no immediate word from Yanukovich - who is due to visit Malta next week. He is due to leave on an official visit to China tomorrow. His press service said employees at his administration were working normally but declined to say where he was.

A spokesman for Prime Minister Mykola Azarov said employees were not able to enter the main government building in Kiev and negotiations were under way to get them in. Azarov had not yet arrived at his desk.

Azarov's deputy, Serhiy Arbuzov, later appeared at a meeting with a parliamentary committee, saying: "I'm here to show the government is working."

 

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