Story highlights
In exchange, the government will drop charges against arrested protesters
Ukraine is mired in a political crisis that has led to the Prime Minister's resignation
The opposition wants more concessions from the government
Ukraine’s President returned to work Monday after four days of sick leave as neighbor Russia called on protesters who have tried to curb his powers to stop their “threats and ultimatums.”
Protesters vacated city hall, unblocked a major street and left other government buildings as part of an amnesty deal calling for the opposition to vacate government buildings in Kiev, opposition parliament member Arsen Avakov said.
They had occupied the city hall for nearly three months.
Protesters will remain outside city hall and will not allow police inside, he said. The opposition plans to hold a rally Sunday morning.
Ukraine is mired in a political crisis that has led to the Prime Minister’s resignation.
Thousands of demonstrators have packed Kiev’s Independence Square since November, when President Viktor Yanukovych reversed a decision to sign a trade deal with the European Union and instead turned toward Russia.
Violent confrontations flared after a sweeping anti-protest law was signed weeks ago, and an uneasy standoff remains on the streets.
Despite concessions such as the deal, Ukraine’s opposition parties continue to call for constitutional reforms to shift power away from the president.
Ukraine, a country of 45 million people, is split between pro-European regions in the West and a more Russia-oriented East.
Its leader and Russian President Vladimir Putin agreed on a $15 billion deal for Russia to buy Ukrainian debt and slash the price of natural gas.
Yanukovych has resisted calls for him to step down and defended the government’s handling of the political crisis.
READ: East vs West – What’s behind Ukraine’s political crisis?
READ: Opinion: Why Ukraine’s future lies with the EU, not Russia