A statement on President Viktor Yanukovych's website today said he had offered the country's No 2 job to Arseniy Yatsenyuk, an ex-foreign minister who had led efforts to integrate Ukraine with the European Union.
The offer, which also includes a deputy-premier post for Vitali Klitschko, another top opposition leader, appeared to be a substantial concession by Yanukovych to protester anger, which began in November when he ditched a long-awaited trade pact with the EU in favor of closer ties with Russia.
The opposition has demanded that Yanukovych himself step down and call early elections, and there was no immediate comment from Yatsenyuk on whether he would accept Yanukovych's offer.
It came hours after the head of the country's police, widely despised by the opposition, claimed protesters had seized and tortured two policemen before releasing them. The opposition denied any such seizure and claimed Interior Minister Vitaly Zakharchenko was making a bogus claim in order to justify a police sweep against protesters.
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Protesters have rained stones and firebombs on police while officers retaliate with stun grenades and tear gas. Flames leapt high from barricade of burning tires today, but there was no obvious violence in Kiev's central Independence Square, known as the Maidan. Demonstrators milled about, many of them bearing clubs, metal rods and large sticks.
Yanukovych also agreed to discuss ways of changing Ukraine's constitution toward a parliamentary-presidential republic, which was one of the demands of the opposition.