In Ukraine Government officials Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovich declared "We... understand that this is another challenge to us, to the whole country. We will think how to respond accordingly. Speaking in Dnipropetrovsk on 28 April, Yanukovich offered 200.000 euro to citizens able to provide the authorities with useful information on the authors of the attack.
Ukrainian Prime Minister Mykola Azarov declared that the explosions "are profitable to those forces that are interested in destabilizing the situation in the country.".
Mykola Tomenko, deputy
parliament speaker and member of the opposition, suggested the blasts were orchestrated by the government in order to quiet Western criticism of
Yulia Tymoshenko's
imprisonment: "I don't rule out that the authorities and law enforcement bodies may be among the organizers of a scenario, which involves deflecting the attention of the world and Ukraine form Tymoshenko's case on the whole and her beating in particular." Kirill Frolov, director of the Ukraine desk of the Institute for the studies of the
CIS countries, supported the hypothesis of political motivation for the attack, but also condemned the cynicism of the opposition accusing the government of the attack. According to Frolov, the Yanukovich regime did not need such an event, as his political manifesto for the upcoming elections would be based on the good conduct of
UEFA Euro 2012.
Abroad Matthew Rojansky, on
CNN, suggested several possible motivations for the attack, ranging from random acts of violence, or the work of gangs from Ukraine's criminal underworld and endlessly feuding
oligarchs, to international terrorism linked to
al-Qa'eda, up to the eventual involvement of
Russian secret services. == See also ==