Read more in section
Ukraine Ukrainian official suspended in ticket probe Today at 07:11
Ukraine Bare-breasted Ukraine activists grab Euro 2012 cup Yesterday at 21:01
Ukraine BBC News: Ukraine Olympic official 'willing to sell tickets to black market' Yesterday at 20:24
Ukraine Foreign Ministry doesn't know new date of summit of Central and Eastern European states Yesterday at 20:11
Ukraine Key political risks to watch in Ukraine Yesterday at 19:52
Ukraine Ukraine plans Euro crowd control, prostitution a problem Yesterday at 19:06
Ukraine Soviet dissidents meet in Crimea, decide to continue rights movement traditions Yesterday at 17:31
Ukraine German Embassy in Ukraine issues 300,000 visas to Ukrainians in 2011 Yesterday at 17:25
Ukraine Fule: EU never declared boycott of Euro 2012 matches in Ukraine Yesterday at 16:15
Most popular Ukraine
Yushchenko calls early vote
Oct 8, 2008 at 21:56The vote will be the third parliamentary election in less than three years and deal a severe blow to an economy already battered by the global financial crisis. The date of the election has not yet been announced.
Speaking in a televised address to the nation aired late Wednesday, Yushchenko accused his Orange Revolution partner Prime Minister Yulia Tymoshenko of ignoring national interests for the sake of acquiring power.
"I am deeply convinced that the democratic coalition was ruined by one thing _ the ambition of one person, the hunger for power ... and the dominance of personal interests over national ones," Yushchenko said.
The address had apparently been recorded in advance as Yushchenko was in Italy on an official visit. The announcement was likely to spark protests from Tymoshenko, who had sought to cling on to her job.
Tymoshenko said calling an election before late November would be unconstitutional and has vowed to challenge such a decision.
Yushchenko defended his decision as the only way to preserve the country's democracy and national interests. "They wanted to turn us back and then, as now, I am defending our future," Yushchenko said. "The vote will be democratic and lawful."
The main hero and heroine of the 2004 Orange Revolution pro-democracy protests that propelled Yushchenko to power and put Ukraine on a pro-Western course, Yushchenko and Tymoshenko have turned into vicious rivals.
Yushchenko pulled out of the their nine-month-old coalition last month, after Tymoshenko sided with the opposition to trim his powers and over disagreements related to ties with Russia.
Tymoshenko says Yushchenko's plan to dissolve parliament was aimed at sidelining her as an opponent in the 2010 presidential vote.