
KIEV (Reuters) - Deputies in the Ukrainian parliament brawled in the chamber on Tuesday after a communist leader accused nationalists of playing into the hands of Russia by adopting extreme tactics early in the Ukrainian crisis.
Two
deputies from the Svoboda far-right nationalist party took exception to the
charges by communist Petro Symonenko and seized him while he was talking from
the rostrum.
His party
supporters rallied to his defense and a brawl broke out with deputies from
other parties joining in and trading punches.
Symonenko
stirred nationalist anger when, referring to pro-Russian protesters who seized
buildings in eastern Ukraine, he said nationalists had set a precedent earlier
this year by seizing public buildings in protest at the rule of ousted
President Viktor Yanukovich.
Now, he
said, armed groups were attacking people who wanted to defend their rights by
peaceful means.
"You
are today doing everything to intimidate people. You arrest people, start fighting
people who have a different point of view," he said, before being pulled
away from the rostrum by the Svoboda deputies.
Symonenko
did not appear to have been hurt in the brawl involving other deputies. But one
deputy later resumed his seat in the chamber with scratches on his face clearly
showing.
The
communists backed Yanukovich and his Regions Party through the three months
leading up to him fleeing the country on February 21 after more than 100 people
were shot dead by police snipers in Kiev.
(Reporting
by Natalia Zinets; Writing By Richard Balmforth; Editing by Hugh Lawson)
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