KIEV, Ukraine (AP) — Ukraine's parliament on Wednesday delayed a decision on whether to release jailed former premier Yulia Tymoshenko, a move that threatens to derail this ex-Soviet republic's push toward the European Union and shift it back into Russia's orbit.
Parliament Speaker Volodymyr Rybak said the bill allowing the former premier to travel to Germany for medical treatment would be taken up again next Tuesday, only nine days ahead of an important summit with EU leaders.
EU officials have warned that they will not back a free-trade and political association agreement with Ukraine if Tymoshenko remains in jail. They have urged her rival, President Viktor Yanukovych, to release her for treatment in Germany as a compromise measure. Previously they have called Tymoshenko's trial politically motivated.
"Time is running out to achieve compliance with the conditions required for the signature," two special EU envoys, former Polish President Aleksander Kwasniewski and former European Parliament President Pat Cox, said in a statement late Wednesday.
EU foreign ministers meet Monday to discuss whatever progress Ukraine has made, though member states already have made clear they would take the advice of Kwasniewski and Cox, who have been shuttling between Kiev and Brussels.
EU Parliament President Martin Schulz said the Cox-Kwasniewski mission would be extended right up to the Nov. 28-29 Eastern Partnership summit in Vilnius, Lithuania.
The two envoys said next Tuesday's parliamentary session in Kiev will be crucial. "It can be decisive in yielding a settlement but risks also to result in stalemate and a non-productive blame game," they said.
Opposition leaders accused Yanukovych and his allies in parliament of purposely sabotaging the long-awaited EU deal.
Russia staunchly opposes the signing of the EU agreement and has used threats, sanctions and offers of price discounts in an attempt to lure Kiev away from the EU and into a Moscow-led customs union instead.
After the session was closed, parliament erupted with angry chants of "Shame! Shame!" from opposition lawmakers, some dressed in white sweaters that read "Freedom to Ukraine" and others wearing red sweaters reading "Ukraine is Europe."
"You are ready only for political persecution, blackmail, pressure and to hold on to your power," opposition leader and top Tymoshenko ally Arseniy Yatsenyuk said, referring to Yanukovych. "We, however, want the power to belong to the people of Ukraine."
Cox and Kwasniewski also noted "a chronic lack of mutual trust and confidence between the parties of government and opposition." EU Commission spokesman Peter Stano urged Ukraine to show "determined action and tangible results" for the agreement to be signed.
Meanwhile, in another sign that Kiev might be tilting toward Moscow, Prime Minister Mykola Azarov told his Cabinet on Wednesday that normalization of ties with Russia is Ukraine's top priority.