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Episode details

World Service,26 Mar 2014,11 mins

Ukraine: past and present

From Our Own Correspondent

Available for over a year

The situation in Ukraine remains tense. Russia is preparing to absorb Crimea based on an independence referendum whose validity Kiev and the West refuse to recognise. Ukrainian army troops remain stationed in the region. And pro-Russians in other parts of Ukraine clamour for their own opportunities to secede to Moscow. Our correspondents ask what Ukraine's recent history can teach us about this highly complex state of affairs. Jamie Coomarasamy meets the man who was briefly President of Crimea, before being exiled by the Ukrainian authorities. What does he make of rejoining Russia? And will Jamie accept his offer of employment? Meanwhile, how does Crimea's independence movement measure up to the Ukrainian one which succeeded in 1991? The answer, claims Stephen Mulvey, is all in the moustaches. Presenter: Pascale Harter Producer: Ben Weisz Photo: People demonstrate waving Ukrainian and European flags during the independence referendum campaign in Kiev 30 November 1991. Photo credit: SERGEY SUPINSKI/AFP/Getty Images

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