Link to live feed.
https://www.youtube.com/...
RT
http://rt.com/...
Protester's TV feed with stereo sound
http://www.ustream.tv/...
Photos from today's clashes
http://www.bbc.co.uk/...
Context below.
Hopes for a settlement of Ukraine's three-month crisis are evaporating amid scenes of rioting, burning buildings, police bombings and rubber bullets in Kiev that left up to nine protesters reported dead and more than 100 seriously injured.
A large section of the protest camp in the capital, Kiev, was engulfed in flames on Tuesday night as police advanced on the demonstrators using water cannons and stun grenades.
The security services had earlier issued a warning, ordering tens of thousands of protesters to get off the streets by Tuesday evening or face a crackdown.
http://www.theguardian.com/...
BBC Coverage
http://www.bbc.co.uk/...
Google Newsfeed
https://news.google.com/...
Background:
Ukraine's Forever Revolution
Why the country's political crisis will persist, even if the protesters win.
Ukraine’s Euromaidan protest movement, like many mass political uprisings before it, has united disparate groups and people by necessity, and what happens when the object of their loathing is vanquished is anyone’s guess. The three opposition politicians leading the movement—all of whom have an eye on presidential elections—whenever these take place—are divided and unable to agree on who the supreme commander is. The Batkivshchyna (Fatherland) party—which is headed by Arseniy Yatsenyuk, a savvy political strategist who looks like a CPA, while former Prime Minister Yulia Tymoshenko, the actual leader, remains in jail—has always considered itself the primus inter pares. Yatsenyuk is less charismatic than Vitali Klitschko, the boxer-turned-politician who heads the Udar (Punch) party, but he seems unwilling to yield the top position to the more popular Klitschko, who is the most likely to defeat Yanukovych in a head-to-head contest, according to recent polling.
Rounding out the triumvirate is Oleh Tyahnybok, the far-right leader, who, while the most electrifying politician of the lot, is an ideological outlier. His Svoboda (Freedom) party has recently made efforts to become more mainstream; nevertheless, large portions of Ukrainian society reject his brand of extreme Ukrainian nationalism, viewing the party platform as far too radical and ethnocentric (or even racist). So far, protest leaders have been unable or unwilling to control their extremist wing. As a whole, Euromaidan supporters are emphatically not the Ukrainian-speaking proto-fascists they’ve been portrayed as in pro-government and Russian media. Nevertheless, the far-right is a key contributor to these protests, and one that is increasingly demanding a more prominent political role.
http://www.theatlantic.com/...