Declaration of Independence of Ukraine
The Act of Declaration of
Independence of Ukraine (Ukrainian: Акт проголошення незалежності України,
translit. Akt proholoshennya nezalezhnosti Ukrayiny) was adopted by the
Ukrainian parliament on 24 August 1991.The Act reestablished Ukraine's state independence.
Adoption The Act was
adopted in the aftermath of the coup attempt on 19 August when hardline
Communist leaders of the Soviet Union tried to restore central Communist party
control over the USSR. In response (during a tense 11-hour extraordinary
session), the Supreme Soviet (parliament) of the Ukrainian SSR in a special
Saturday session overwhelmingly approved the Act of Declaration. The Act passed
with 321 votes in favor, 2 votes against, and 6 abstentions (out of 360
attendants).[3] The text was largely composed during the night of 23 August–24
August mainly by Levko Lukyanenko, Serhiy Holovatyi, Mykhailo Horyn, Ivan Zayets
and Vyacheslav Chornovil. The Communists (CPU), being persuaded behind
the scenes by their fellow Party member and Supreme Soviet Chairman Leonid
Kravchuk, felt compelled to support the act in order to distance themselves
from the coup. CPU First Secretary Stanislav Hurenko argued that "it will
be a disaster" if the CPU didn't support independence. CPU members had
been unnerved by the news of former party leader Vladimir Ivashko's arrest in
Moscow, the re-subordination of the Soviet Army under the leaders of the
Russian SFSR and the sealing of the Communist Party Central Committee's
premises. The same day (24 August), the parliament called for a
referendum on support for the Declaration of Independence. The proposal for
calling the national referendum came jointly from opposition leaders Ihor
Yukhnovsky and Dmytro Pavlychko. The Parliament also voted for the creation of
a national guard of Ukraine and turned jurisdiction over all the armed forces
located on Ukrainian territory over to itself. Other than a noisy crowd
that had gathered at the Parliament building, the streets of Kyiv were quiet
that day, with few signs of open celebration. In the days that followed a
number of resolutions and decrees were passed: nationalizing all CPU property
and handing it over to the Supreme Soviet and local councils; issuing an
amnesty for all political prisoners; suspending all CPU activities and freezing
CPU assets and bank accounts pending official investigations into possible
collaboration with the Moscow coup plotters; setting up a committee of inquiry
into official behavior during the coup; and establishing a committee on
military matters related to the creation of a Ministry of Defense of Ukraine.
On 26 August 1991 the Permanent
Representative of the Ukrainian SSR to the United Nations (the Ukrainian SSR
was a founding member of the United Nations) Hennadiy Udovenko informed the
office of the Secretary General of the United Nations that his permanent
mission to this international assembly would officially be designated as
representing Ukraine. That same day, the executive committee of Kyiv also voted
to remove all the monuments of Communist heroes from public places, including
the Lenin monument on the central October Revolution Square.The large square
would be renamed Maidan Nezalezhnosti (Independence Square) as would the
central Metro station below it, the executive committee decided. Two days
later, more than 200,000 Lviv and Lviv oblast residents declared their
readiness to serve in the national guard.
In the independence referendum on
1 December 1991, the people of Ukraine expressed widespread support for the Act
of Declaration of Independence, with more than 90% voting in favor, and 82% of
the electorate participating. The referendum took place on the same day as
Ukraine's first direct presidential election; all six presidential candidates
supported independence and campaigned for a "yes" vote. The
referendum's passage ended any realistic chance of the Soviet Union staying
together even on a limited scale; Ukraine had long been second only to Russia
in economic and political power. A week after the election, newly elected president
Leonid Kravchuk joined his Russian and Belarusian counterparts in signing the
Belavezha Accords, which declared that the Soviet Union had ceased to exist.
The Soviet Union officially dissolved on 26 December. Since 1992, the 24th of
August is celebrated in Ukraine as Independence Day.
International recognition Poland
and Canada were the first countries to recognize Ukraine's independence, both
on 2 December 1991. The same day (2 December) it was reported during the
late-evening airing of the television news program Vesti that the President of
the Russian SFSR, Boris Yeltsin, had recognized Ukraine's independence. The
United States did so on 25 December 1991. That month the independence of
Ukraine was recognized by 68 states, and in 1992 it was recognized by another
64 states.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Declaration_of_Independence_of_Ukraine
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