Lutsenko: SBU agents are investigating me

An anti-government protester poses for a portrait near the site of clashes between riot police and demonstrators in Kiev, Ukraine, on January 28, 2014. File picture: Thomas Peter

An anti-government protester poses for a portrait near the site of clashes between riot police and demonstrators in Kiev, Ukraine, on January 28, 2014. File picture: Thomas Peter

Published Feb 6, 2014

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Kiev - Ukrainian opposition leader and former interior minister Yuriy Lutsenko has said the country's security services are investigating him for an alleged attempt to “overthrow the state”.

Lutsenko, a close ally of jailed pro-Western former prime minister Yulia Tymoshenko, is a key figure in the protest movement locked in a two-month confrontation with Ukraine's President Viktor Yanukovich.

“Today I received notice from the SBU security service about a case against me over 'an attempt to overthrow the constitutional state',” Lutsenko said in remarks published on his official website late on Wednesday.

He said the investigation was linked to a call he made for the creation of an alternative parliament to be established under the name People's Rada.

If convicted, the 49-year-old politician, who spent two years in jail before being released last year under Western pressure, could serve up to five years in prison.

No official confirmation of the investigation was immediately available. The security service declined comment.

However, the Ukrainska Pravda news website published a letter from Ukraine's security services asking media to hand over video of Lutsenko at a January 22 protest in Kiev.

Ukraine's opposition wants parliament, dominated by the ruling party, to amend the constitution to introduce curbs on presidential power.

Protests erupted in November after Yanukovich rejected an association agreement with the European Union under pressure from the Kremlin and the ensuing unrest has claimed several lives.

Last month, Lutsenko was hospitalised with concussion after being injured in clashes between police and protesters outside a court where demonstrators had been sentenced.

At the time he spoke to riot police and tried to persuade them to change sides.

“You're protecting with your bodies the gang who robbed the country. You used to be the country's pride, but there's mafia behind your backs now,” he said.

Lutsenko was convicted of arranging illegal work-related benefits for his chauffeur and jailed for four years in 2012.

He was pardoned by Yanukovich under EU pressure last year. - AFP

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