On 23 February 2014, a meeting of citizens opposed to the
Euromaidan movement that
ousted the Ukrainian government from power in
Kyiv led to Chaly being proclaimed as "mayor" of Sevastopol. The
Sevastopol City Council handed power to Chaly on 24 February, following the resignation of
Volodymyr Yatsuba as the city administrator appointed by the president of Ukraine (at the time the city had no elected mayor). On 26 February, Chaly declared that Sevastopol would not submit to orders of the acting leader of the Ukrainian home office,
Arsen Avakov. Simultaneously, he invited officers of the officially disbanded
Berkut riot police unit to the city. He said that they could become a basis for future defence groups in the city. Chaly visited the
Kremlin in
Moscow on 18 March 2014 to sign the
Treaty on Accession of the Republic of Crimea to Russia together with Russian president
Vladimir Putin and Crimean prime minister
Sergey Aksyonov. In March 2014, the
Security Service of Ukraine announced an investigation into Chaly for allegedly steering some ₴23.9 million from his charitable organisation to bankroll anti-Ukraine activity. On 1 April 2014, he was appointed as acting governor of Sevastopol City by Russia and occupied this position till 14 April 2014, when he resigned and was replaced by Sergey Menyaylo.
Sanctions Chaly was sanctioned by the British government in 2014 as a result of the annexation of Crimea. ==References==