You're reading: Poland urges Ukraine to make East-West choice

Polish President Bronislaw Komorowski urged Ukraine's leader on Thursday to push for integration with the European Union, but acknowledged that a key obstacle is the country's jailing of its former premier, Yulia Tymoshenko.

After talks with Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych
in Kiev, Komorowski said Ukraine must decide whether it wants to align
itself with the EU or join a Russia-led customs union. “It is impossible
to implement those two scenarios at the same time,” Komorowski said at a
news conference with Yanukovych. “A choice has to be made.”

Tymoshenko,
the country’s top opposition leader and the heroine of the 2004 Orange
Revolution, is serving a seven-year jail term on charges of abuse of
office while leading natural gas import negotiations with Russia in
2009.

Tymoshenko, 51, denies the charges and accuses Yanukovych,
the antagonist of the Orange Revolution, of throwing her in jail in
order to bar her from Ukraine’s Oct. 28 parliamentary election.

The
nation’s relations with the EU have been strained over her treatment,
which the West has condemned as politically motivated. The EU has balked
at implementing a key cooperation deal with Ukraine over the Tymoshenko
case.

Komorowski said Tymoshenko’s jailing is a key impediment n Ukraine’s road into the European club.

“The
Tymoshenko case is an internal matter of Ukraine, but at the same time
this case is a serious, significant obstacle in the rapprochement
between Ukraine and the European Union,” Komorowski said. “From our side
we expect that all Ukrainian political players will work toward
removing these obstacles which hamper the … integration of Ukraine
with European structures.”

Yanukovych skirted a question on
whether he could pardon Tymoshenko, who also faces an array of other
accusations, including in connection with a 15-year-old murder case.

“The
(legal) process in the case of Tymoshenko is not over yet,” Yanukovych
said at the news conference. “We are interested and will do everything
so that all the cases take place only in the legal framework.”

Tymoshenko
is undergoing treatment in a Ukrainian hospital for a severe spinal
condition which has left her partially paralyzed and in constant pain.
She has been unable to attend trials and take part in investigations in
cases against her.

Yanukovych wished her a speedy recovery so her trials can continue.

Tymoshenko’s
lawyer, Serhiy Vlasenko, said the Ukrainian leader’s statement signaled
a continuation of “political repression” in Ukraine.

“Yanukovych
has shown his true face. He has shown that he doesn’t understand
European values, European democracy and what a leader of a European
country should be like,” Vlasenko told The Associated Press.