But a demonstration by protesters who clashed with police
in the first real anti-government demonstration since the "Euromaidan"
upheaval last winter spelled potential for disorder in the run-up to the
election on Oct. 26.
President Petro Poroshenko, elected in May after his predecessor,
the Moscow-backed Viktor Yanukovich, was ousted, wants a calm run-up
to an election which he hopes will give his government further
legitimacy and produce a broad platform to end a separatist conflict in
the east and pursue his pro-Europe agenda.
The demonstrators, many of them masked, threw smoke-bombs
and used air guns to shoot out windows of the parliament building,
forcing an early end to the session, which also voted in a new defense
minister.
Their motives and party affiliations were not clear and members of two
nationalist parties who were nearby denied any links to the violence.
Legislation
moved through parliament is aimed at cleaning up Ukraine's profile and
raising the post-Soviet country to European standards as well as head
off suspicions by its critics and some in the European Union that it is
dragging its feet.
The new laws, which will tackle
high-level corruption and reform the prosecutor general's office, have
been sought by the EU with which Ukraine has signed an association
agreement as part of its post-Yanukovich European agenda."The offshore era has ended," Prime Minister Arseny Yatseniuk said, referring to laws under which government, judiciary and law enforcement officials will have to declare their own and their families' assets and financial transactions.
The declared income of civil servants will be measured against lifestyle and property holdings. Officials' bank accounts will be open to monitoring by a state committee.
Reform of the prosecutor's office will curb the functions of a Soviet-era institution that has been long used by authorities in Ukraine as a tool to harass the political opposition.
Bribery has
been widespread at virtually all levels of Ukrainian government and
public life since independence from the Soviet Union in 1991.
International watchdogs say it worsened in the past four years under the
ousted Yanukovich.
UNDER THE MICROSCOPE
"Now every civil servant will be under the microscope.
Those who illegally hold something will be brought to justice,"
Yatseniuk said.
"We have taken a decisive step in
the struggle with corruption, a cancerous tumor which eats away at our
society," Poroshenko said after the vote on anti-corruption laws.The reform of the prosecutor's office relieved it of rights given to it by Soviet dictator Josif Stalin, he said.
In other legislation rushed through at the last session of the current parliament, National Guard chief Stepan Poltorak became new defense minister. He replaces Valery Heteley, who has faced criticism over the rout of Ukrainian forces in the east.
The battlefield losses at Ilovaisk, east of the
rebel-controlled eastern city of Donetsk at the end of August, by what
Kiev said was direct intervention of Russian troops, forced Poroshenko
to abandon attempts to crush the separatists and he called a ceasefire
from Sept. 5.
The ceasefire forms the core of his peace plan that would also provide provisional self-rule to the separatists.
But it is increasingly under pressure. A military
spokesman said on Tuesday that seven more Ukrainian servicemen were
killed in the past 24 hours - six of them killed in two landmine
explosions - bringing to about 50 the number of Ukrainian troops killed
since the ceasefire came into force.
Opinion polls suggest Poroshenko's political bloc will
perform well in the election, bringing him the coalition of support he
is hoping for.
But he faces internal opposition from parties who fear he may make too
many concessions to the separatist leaders in the heavily
industrialized, mainly Russian-speaking east, who are pressing for unity
with Russia.
The United Nations says more than 3,600 people - Ukrainian troops,
separatists and civilians - have been killed in eastern Ukraine since
the fighting erupted there in April.
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