1
By ANDREW HIGGINS and ANDREW E. KRAMER KIEV, Ukraine — Abandoned by his own guards and reviled across the Ukrainian capital but still determined to recover his shredded authority, President Viktor F. Yanukovych fled Kiev on Saturday to denounce what he called a violent coup, as his offi- cial residence, his vast, colonnad- ed office complex and other once impregnable centers of power fell without a fight to throngs of joy- ous citizens stunned by their tri- umph. While Mr. Yanukovych’s nem- esis, former Prime Minister Yulia V. Tymoshenko, was released from a penitentiary hospital, Par- liament found the president un- able to fulfill his duties and exer- cised its constitutional powers to set an election for May 25 to se- lect his replacement. But with both Mr. Yanukovych and his Russian patrons speaking of a “coup” carried out by “bandits” and “hooligans,” it was far from clear that the day’s lightning- quick events would be the last act in a struggle that has not just convulsed Ukraine but expanded into an East-West confrontation reminiscent of the Cold War. At the presidential residence a short distance from the capital, protesters carrying clubs and some wearing masks were in control of the entryways Satur- day morning and watched as thousands of citizens strolled through the grounds in wonder. “This commences a new life for Ukraine,” said Roman Dakus, a protester-turned-guard, who was wearing a ski helmet and carry- ing a length of pipe as he blocked a doorway at the compound. “This is only a start,” he added. “We need now to make a new structure and a new system, a foundation for our future, with rights for everybody, and we need to investigate who ordered the violence.” With the riot police they bat- tled for days having disappeared, the protesters claimed to be in charge of security for the city. There was no sign of looting, ei- ther in the city proper or in the presidential compound. A pugnacious Mr. Yanukovych appeared on television Saturday afternoon, apparently from the eastern city of Kharkiv, near UKRAINE’S LEADER FLEES THE CAPITAL; ELECTIONS CALLED ASSOCIATED PRESS President Viktor Yanukovych denounced a “coup” on TV. SERGEY PONOMAREV FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES Former Prime Minister Yulia V. Tymoshenko spoke at Independence Square in Kiev after being released from a prison hospital. Continued on Page 14 Parliament Says President Can’t Perform Duties — Archrival Leaves Prison This article is by Kirk Semple, Joseph Goldstein and Jeffrey E. Singer. A Chinese woman walked into a law office in New York’s China- town and asked to see her lawyer. She had applied for asylum, claiming that she had been forced to get an abortion in China to comply with the country’s family- planning laws, and she was anx- ious about her coming interview with immigration officials. She had good reason to be wor- ried: Her claim, invented by her lawyer’s associates, was false. But the lawyer, John Wang, told her to relax. The process, he said, was straightforward, and as long as she memorized a few de- tails, everything would be fine. “You are making yourself ner- vous,” he said in Mandarin. “All you would be asked is the same few rubbish questions.” “Just make it up,” the lawyer added. The conversation, in December 2010, was secretly recorded by federal officials conducting a wide investigation of immigra- tion fraud in New York’s Chinese Asylum Fraud In Chinatown: Industry of Lies Continued on Page 20 By ELLEN BARRY BOLLIKUNTA, India — Latha Reddy Musukula was making tea on a recent morning when she spotted the money lenders walk- ing down the dirt path toward her house. They came in a phalanx of 15 men, by her estimate. She knew their faces, because they had walked down the path before. After each visit, her husband, a farmer named Veera Reddy, sank deeper into silence, frozen by some terror he would not explain. Three times he cut his wrists. He tied a noose to a tree, relenting when the family surrounded him, weeping. In the end he waited un- til Ms. Musukula stepped out, and then he hanged himself from a pipe supporting their roof, leav- ing a careful list of each debt he owed to each money lender. She learned the full sum then: 400,000 rupees, or $6,430. A current of dread runs through this farmland, where women in jewel-colored saris bend their backs over watery ter- races of rice. In Andhra Pradesh, the southern state where Ms. Musukula lives, the suicide rate among farmers is nearly three times the national average; since 1995, the number of suicides by India’s farmers has passed 290,000, according to the national crime records bureau, though the statistics do not specify the rea- son for the act. India’s small farmers, once the country’s economic backbone and most reliable vote bank, are increasingly being left behind. With global competition and ris- ing costs cutting into their lean Continued on Page 8 After Farmers Commit Suicide, Debts Fall on Families in India ANDREA BRUCE FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES An Indian woman whose husband had committed suicide. By SABRINA TAVERNISE Dr. Michael Siegel, a hard- charging public health research- er at Boston University, argues that e-cigarettes could be the be- ginning of the end of smoking in America. He sees them as a dis- ruptive innovation that could make cigarettes obsolete, like the computer did to the typewriter. But his former teacher and mentor, Stanton A. Glantz, a pro- fessor of medicine at the Uni- versity of California, San Francis- co, is convinced that e-cigarettes may erase the hard-won progress achieved over the last half-centu- ry in reducing smoking. He pre- dicts that the modern gadgetry will be a glittering gateway to the deadly, old-fashioned habit for children, and that adult smokers will stay hooked longer now that they can get a nicotine fix at their desks. These experts represent the two camps now at war over the public health implications of e-cigarettes. The devices, intend- ed to feed nicotine addiction with- out the toxic tar of conventional cigarettes, have divided a nor- mally sedate public health com- munity that had long been united in the fight against smoking and Hot Debate Over E-Cigarettes AsPath to Tobacco, or From It THE NEW SMOKE Public Health Effects Continued on Page 19 Visualization has long been a part of sports, and at the Winter Games it has become increasingly sophisticated, es- sential and elaborate. PAGE 1 SPORTSSUNDAY Imagine That, a Gold Medal U(D5E71D)x+"!{!_!#!& Maureen Dowd PAGE 11 SUNDAY REVIEW VOL. CLXIII .. No. 56,421 © 2014 The New York Times NEW YORK, SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 2014 By RANDAL C. ARCHIBOLD and GINGER THOMPSON MEXICO CITY — Just before 7 a.m. on Saturday, dozens of sol- diers and police officers descend- ed on a condominium tower in Mazatlán, Mexico, a beach resort known as much as a hangout for drug traffickers as for its seafood and surf. The forces were following yet another tip about the where- abouts of one of the world’s most wanted drug kingpins, Joaquín Guzmán Loera — known as El Chapo, which means “Shorty” — who had eluded such raids for 13 years since escaping from prison, by many accounts in a laundry cart. With an army of guards and lethally enforced loyalty, he reigned over a worldwide, multi- billion-dollar drug empire that supplied much of the cocaine and marijuana to the United States despite a widespread, yearslong manhunt by American and Mex- ican forces. This time, however, Mr. Guz- mán, believed to be in his mid-50s, did not slip out a door, disappear into the famed moun- tains around his northwest Mex- ico home, or prove to be absent, as he had in so many previous at- tempts to apprehend him. He ap- parently had no time to reach for the arsenal of guns and grenades he had amassed or dash into a storm drain or tunnel, as authori- ties said he recently did minutes ahead of pursuers. Mexican marines and the po- lice, aided by information from the United States Drug Enforce- ment Administration, immigra- tion and customs officials and the United States Marshals Service, took him into custody without fir- ing a shot, according to Mexican officials. Mexico’s attorney general, Jesús Murillo Karam, said a later forensic exam made it “100 per- cent” certain the man was Mr. Guzmán; the tests were done to avoid the kind of embarrassment Mexican officials faced in June 2012 when they announced the arrest of Mr. Guzmán’s son, only to later discover it was not him. Mr. Guzmán faces a slew of drug trafficking and organized crime charges in the United States, which had offered $5 mil- lion for information leading to his arrest in the hopes of dealing a crippling blow to an organization that is the country’s top provider of illicit drugs. Mr. Guzmán’s Sinaloa Cartel is Continued on Page 11 Joaquín Guzmán Loera, known as El Chapo, after he was cap- tured in Mazatlán, Mexico, in the early hours of Saturday. El Chapo, Most-Wanted Drug Lord, Is Captured By ANDREW E. KRAMER KIEV, Ukraine — An eerie calm and a light mist shrouded President Viktor F. Yanukovych’s sprawling residential compound just outside the capital on Satur- day morning as street fighters from the center of Kiev made their way inside, gingerly pass- ing a wrought-iron gate and cau- tioning one another about booby traps and snipers. They found none of either but discovered instead a world surely just as surreal as the charred wasteland of barricades and de- bris on the occupied central plaza that has been their home for months. It was a vista of bizarre and whimsical attractions on a grand scale, a panorama of waste and inexplicable taste. They saw about a half-dozen large residences of various styles, a private zoo with rare breeds of goats, a coop for pheas- ants from Asia, a golf course, a garage filled with classic cars and a private restaurant in the form of a pirate ship, with the name “Galleon” on the stern. One man in the 31st Lviv Hun- Behind Gates, Bizarre Vision Of Opulence Continued on Page 13 After Hurricane Katrina, experts of- fered a plan to reimagine New Orleans, but residents insisted on a slower, politi- cally palatable, way forward. PAGE 17 NATIONAL 16-20 Lessons For Rebuilding Detroit The Security Council unanimously adopted a resolution ordering both sides in Syria’s civil war to stop blocking de- liveries of humanitarian aid. PAGE 8 INTERNATIONAL 6-15 U.N. Orders Syrian Aid A 2011 law curbing union power has al- ready had significant effects, and some union supporters worry that it may be- come a pattern in other states. PAGE 1 SUNDAY BUSINESS Wisconsin’s Deflated Unions Today, sun and clouds, afternoon shower, high 53. Tonight, snow, lit- tle or no accumulation, low 32. Tomorrow, colder, high 38. Weath- er map, SportsSunday, Page 12. $6 beyond the greater New York metropolitan area. $5.00 Late Edition

© 2014 The New York Times UKRAINE’S LEADER FLEES THE … file23.02.2014 · While Mr. Yanukovych’s nem-esis, former Prime Minister Yulia V. Tymoshenko, was released from a penitentiary

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

By ANDREW HIGGINS and ANDREW E. KRAMER

KIEV, Ukraine — Abandonedby his own guards and reviledacross the Ukrainian capital butstill determined to recover hisshredded authority, PresidentViktor F. Yanukovych fled Kievon Saturday to denounce what hecalled a violent coup, as his offi-cial residence, his vast, colonnad-ed office complex and other onceimpregnable centers of power fellwithout a fight to throngs of joy-ous citizens stunned by their tri-umph.

While Mr. Yanukovych’s nem-esis, former Prime Minister YuliaV. Tymoshenko, was releasedfrom a penitentiary hospital, Par-liament found the president un-able to fulfill his duties and exer-cised its constitutional powers toset an election for May 25 to se-lect his replacement. But withboth Mr. Yanukovych and hisRussian patrons speaking of a“coup” carried out by “bandits”and “hooligans,” it was far fromclear that the day’s lightning-quick events would be the last actin a struggle that has not justconvulsed Ukraine but expandedinto an East-West confrontationreminiscent of the Cold War.

At the presidential residence ashort distance from the capital,protesters carrying clubs andsome wearing masks were incontrol of the entryways Satur-day morning and watched asthousands of citizens strolledthrough the grounds in wonder.“This commences a new life forUkraine,” said Roman Dakus, aprotester-turned-guard, who waswearing a ski helmet and carry-ing a length of pipe as he blockeda doorway at the compound.“This is only a start,” he added.“We need now to make a newstructure and a new system, afoundation for our future, withrights for everybody, and weneed to investigate who orderedthe violence.”

With the riot police they bat-tled for days having disappeared,the protesters claimed to be incharge of security for the city.There was no sign of looting, ei-ther in the city proper or in thepresidential compound.

A pugnacious Mr. Yanukovychappeared on television Saturdayafternoon, apparently from theeastern city of Kharkiv, near

UKRAINE’S LEADER

FLEES THE CAPITAL;

ELECTIONS CALLED

ASSOCIATED PRESS

President Viktor Yanukovychdenounced a “coup” on TV.

SERGEY PONOMAREV FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES

Former Prime Minister Yulia V. Tymoshenko spoke at Independence Square in Kiev after being released from a prison hospital.

Continued on Page 14

Parliament Says President Can’t Perform

Duties — Archrival Leaves Prison

This article is by Kirk Semple,Joseph Goldstein and Jeffrey E.Singer.

A Chinese woman walked intoa law office in New York’s China-town and asked to see her lawyer.She had applied for asylum,claiming that she had been forcedto get an abortion in China tocomply with the country’s family-planning laws, and she was anx-ious about her coming interviewwith immigration officials.

She had good reason to be wor-ried: Her claim, invented by herlawyer’s associates, was false.

But the lawyer, John Wang,told her to relax. The process, hesaid, was straightforward, and aslong as she memorized a few de-tails, everything would be fine.“You are making yourself ner-vous,” he said in Mandarin. “Allyou would be asked is the samefew rubbish questions.”

“Just make it up,” the lawyeradded.

The conversation, in December2010, was secretly recorded byfederal officials conducting awide investigation of immigra-tion fraud in New York’s Chinese

Asylum FraudIn Chinatown:Industry of Lies

Continued on Page 20

By ELLEN BARRY

BOLLIKUNTA, India — LathaReddy Musukula was making teaon a recent morning when shespotted the money lenders walk-ing down the dirt path toward herhouse. They came in a phalanx of15 men, by her estimate. Sheknew their faces, because theyhad walked down the path before.

After each visit, her husband, afarmer named Veera Reddy, sankdeeper into silence, frozen bysome terror he would not explain.Three times he cut his wrists. Hetied a noose to a tree, relentingwhen the family surrounded him,weeping. In the end he waited un-til Ms. Musukula stepped out,and then he hanged himself froma pipe supporting their roof, leav-ing a careful list of each debt heowed to each money lender. She

learned the full sum then: 400,000rupees, or $6,430.

A current of dread runsthrough this farmland, wherewomen in jewel-colored sarisbend their backs over watery ter-races of rice. In Andhra Pradesh,the southern state where Ms.Musukula lives, the suicide rateamong farmers is nearly threetimes the national average; since1995, the number of suicides byIndia’s farmers has passed290,000, according to the nationalcrime records bureau, though thestatistics do not specify the rea-son for the act.

India’s small farmers, once thecountry’s economic backboneand most reliable vote bank, areincreasingly being left behind.With global competition and ris-ing costs cutting into their lean

Continued on Page 8

After Farmers Commit Suicide, Debts Fall on Families in India

ANDREA BRUCE FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES

An Indian woman whose husband had committed suicide.

By SABRINA TAVERNISE

Dr. Michael Siegel, a hard-charging public health research-er at Boston University, arguesthat e-cigarettes could be the be-ginning of the end of smoking inAmerica. He sees them as a dis-ruptive innovation that couldmake cigarettes obsolete, like thecomputer did to the typewriter.

But his former teacher andmentor, Stanton A. Glantz, a pro-fessor of medicine at the Uni-versity of California, San Francis-co, is convinced that e-cigarettesmay erase the hard-won progressachieved over the last half-centu-ry in reducing smoking. He pre-dicts that the modern gadgetrywill be a glittering gateway to the

deadly, old-fashioned habit forchildren, and that adult smokerswill stay hooked longer now thatthey can get a nicotine fix at theirdesks.

These experts represent thetwo camps now at war over thepublic health implications ofe-cigarettes. The devices, intend-ed to feed nicotine addiction with-out the toxic tar of conventionalcigarettes, have divided a nor-mally sedate public health com-munity that had long been unitedin the fight against smoking and

Hot Debate Over E-Cigarettes

As Path to Tobacco, or From It

THE NEW SMOKE

Public Health Effects

Continued on Page 19

Visualization has long been a part ofsports, and at the Winter Games it hasbecome increasingly sophisticated, es-sential and elaborate. PAGE 1

SPORTSSUNDAY

Imagine That, a Gold Medal

U(D5E71D)x+"!{!_!#!&Maureen Dowd PAGE 11

SUNDAY REVIEW

VOL. CLXIII . . No. 56,421 © 2014 The New York Times NEW YORK, SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 2014

By RANDAL C. ARCHIBOLDand GINGER THOMPSON

MEXICO CITY — Just before 7a.m. on Saturday, dozens of sol-diers and police officers descend-ed on a condominium tower inMazatlán, Mexico, a beach resortknown as much as a hangout fordrug traffickers as for its seafoodand surf.

The forces were following yetanother tip about the where-abouts of one of the world’s mostwanted drug kingpins, JoaquínGuzmán Loera — known as El

Chapo, which means “Shorty” —who had eluded such raids for 13years since escaping from prison,by many accounts in a laundrycart. With an army of guards andlethally enforced loyalty, hereigned over a worldwide, multi-billion-dollar drug empire thatsupplied much of the cocaine andmarijuana to the United Statesdespite a widespread, yearslongmanhunt by American and Mex-ican forces.

This time, however, Mr. Guz-mán, believed to be in hismid-50s, did not slip out a door,disappear into the famed moun-

tains around his northwest Mex-ico home, or prove to be absent,as he had in so many previous at-tempts to apprehend him. He ap-parently had no time to reach forthe arsenal of guns and grenadeshe had amassed or dash into astorm drain or tunnel, as authori-ties said he recently did minutesahead of pursuers.

Mexican marines and the po-lice, aided by information fromthe United States Drug Enforce-ment Administration, immigra-tion and customs officials and theUnited States Marshals Service,took him into custody without fir-ing a shot, according to Mexicanofficials.

Mexico’s attorney general,Jesús Murillo Karam, said a laterforensic exam made it “100 per-cent” certain the man was Mr.Guzmán; the tests were done toavoid the kind of embarrassmentMexican officials faced in June2012 when they announced thearrest of Mr. Guzmán’s son, onlyto later discover it was not him.

Mr. Guzmán faces a slew ofdrug trafficking and organizedcrime charges in the UnitedStates, which had offered $5 mil-lion for information leading to hisarrest in the hopes of dealing acrippling blow to an organizationthat is the country’s top providerof illicit drugs.

Mr. Guzmán’s Sinaloa Cartel isContinued on Page 11

Joaquín Guzmán Loera, known as El Chapo, after he was cap-tured in Mazatlán, Mexico, in the early hours of Saturday.

El Chapo, Most-Wanted Drug Lord, Is Captured

By ANDREW E. KRAMER

KIEV, Ukraine — An eeriecalm and a light mist shroudedPresident Viktor F. Yanukovych’ssprawling residential compoundjust outside the capital on Satur-day morning as street fightersfrom the center of Kiev madetheir way inside, gingerly pass-ing a wrought-iron gate and cau-tioning one another about boobytraps and snipers.

They found none of either butdiscovered instead a world surelyjust as surreal as the charredwasteland of barricades and de-bris on the occupied central plazathat has been their home formonths. It was a vista of bizarreand whimsical attractions on agrand scale, a panorama of wasteand inexplicable taste.

They saw about a half-dozenlarge residences of variousstyles, a private zoo with rarebreeds of goats, a coop for pheas-ants from Asia, a golf course, agarage filled with classic cars anda private restaurant in the formof a pirate ship, with the name“Galleon” on the stern.

One man in the 31st Lviv Hun-

Behind Gates,

Bizarre Vision

Of Opulence

Continued on Page 13

After Hurricane Katrina, experts of-fered a plan to reimagine New Orleans,but residents insisted on a slower, politi-cally palatable, way forward. PAGE 17

NATIONAL 16-20

Lessons For Rebuilding Detroit The Security Council unanimouslyadopted a resolution ordering both sidesin Syria’s civil war to stop blocking de-liveries of humanitarian aid. PAGE 8

INTERNATIONAL 6-15

U.N. Orders Syrian AidA 2011 law curbing union power has al-ready had significant effects, and someunion supporters worry that it may be-come a pattern in other states. PAGE 1

SUNDAY BUSINESS

Wisconsin’s Deflated Unions

Today, sun and clouds, afternoonshower, high 53. Tonight, snow, lit-tle or no accumulation, low 32.Tomorrow, colder, high 38. Weath-er map, SportsSunday, Page 12.

$6 beyond the greater New York metropolitan area. $5.00

Late Edition

C M Y K Nxxx,2014-02-23,A,001,Bs-BK,E3