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Ukraine’s president calls on PM to resign

Yatsenyuk came to lead the Cabinet when Ukraine’s former Russia-friendly president was chased from power in February 2014 by massive street protests.

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Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko steered on Tuesday that Prime Minister Arseny Yatseniuk resign as a result of his authorities had misplaced public help, however stated there shouldn’t be a snap election.

The faction leader of Poroshenko’s party said it would ask parliament to hold a no-confidence vote within hours.

Yatseniuk’s exit would underline the public’s growing disillusion with the leaders it elected after the 2013-14 Maidan uprising that raised hopes of transforming the country.

Poroshenko Bloc has 136 seats, Self-Reliance has 26, Fatherland has 19, and the Radical Party has 19. Both are within the ruling coalition.

Prime Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk was a seminal figure during Ukraine’s 2014 pro-EU revolution who enraged Moscow but endeared himself to the West by promoting belt-tightening measures that could return growth to the former Soviet state.

“We will accept any decision of this parliament”, Yatsenyuk said.

A senior Ukrainian prosecutor resigned on Monday, calling the office he worked for a “hotbed of corruption”, another blow to government attempts to clean up the judiciary, a crucial step to unlock more Western aid. His approval scores have plunged to under 1 % however he has no apparent successor, though the parliamentary speaker and the technocrat finance minister are thought-about contenders. Shokin, who had been nominated by Poroshenko for the post, has been widely criticised by lawmakers and activists for not implementing judicial reforms.

In a separate statement on his website, Poroshenko called for a “complete government reboot” and said he’s seeking to avoid early elections.

Political infighting and a lack of reform prompted the International Monetary Fund to threaten withholding much-needed aid money from Ukraine.

Ukraine has been ready since October for the subsequent tranche of assist, value $ 1.7 billion, which has been held up by considerations over the sluggish tempo of reform.

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Ukraine’s hryvnia currency weakened to a new 11-month low of more than 27 to the dollar on Tuesday, central bank data showed, and has fallen 12.2 percent since the start of this year alone.

Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko Prime Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk and Prosecutor General Viktor Shokin