|url=http://ua.comments.ua/politics/215641-u-zaharchenka-narahuvali-50-postrazhdalih.html |title=У Захарченка нарахували 50 постраждалих "беркутівців" |trans-title=Zakharchenko accounted for 50 victims of Berkut |date=1 December 2013 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081201194141/http://ua.comments.ua/politics/215641-u-zaharchenka-narahuvali-50-postrazhdalih.html |archive-date=1 December 2008 |url-status=dead |access-date=17 February 2014 }} }} On 1 December, Kyiv's District Administrative Court banned further protests in downtown Kyiv at both Maidan Nezalezhnosti and European Square, as well as in front of the Presidential Administration and Interior Ministry buildings, until 7 January 2014. Opposition forces planned the rally on the 1st to take place at St. Michael's Square, which is not among the banned rally locations, with a march towards Maidan Nezalezhnosti. During 1 December rally, protesters followed through and defied the ban and marched from St. Michael's Square to re-take Maidan Nezalezhnosti. Protesters broke several windows in the city council building, followed by crowds spilling out of Maidan Nezalezhnosti to the Presidential Administration building at
Bankova Street and the Cabinet building (
Hrushevskoho Street). People chanted "Out with the thugs" and sang the Ukrainian anthem. The opposition party
Batkivshchyna claimed as much as 500,000 protesters turned out for the rallies, and opposition leader
Petro Poroshenko claimed 350,000 were on Maidan Nezalezhnosti. Other news agencies reported over 100,000 in Maidan Nezalezhnosti alone, and the total number of protesters to be from 400,000 to 800,000. One poll had 70% of the surge in protesters attributable to the violence of 30 November. At around 14:00, a group of protesters commandeered a bulldozer (LongGong CDM 833) from Maidan Nezalezhnosti and attempted to pull down the fence surrounding the Presidential Administration building. People threw bricks at Internal Troops guards. At least three people were injured outside of the presidential administration building, receiving head injuries from flying debris. AFP reporters saw security forces outside the Presidential Administration building fire dozens of stun grenades and smoke bombs at masked demonstrators who were pelting police with stones and Molotov cocktails. The opposition stated that the aforementioned confrontations with police forces were organized by provocateurs and that the opposition has nothing to do with the conflict at
Bankova street. They confirmed that the protests of opposition are peaceful. Number of activists including
People's Deputy of Ukraine Petro Poroshenko attempted to stop the tractor. The Ukrainian Interior Ministry reported that more than 300 members of the radical
Bratstvo (Brotherhood) organization were involved in unlawful actions committed outside the Presidential Administration building, who acted under the direction of its leader,
Dmytro Korchynsky. The opposition occupied the
Kyiv City Council (City Hall) and the
Trade Unions' Building. They still remain under control of the protesters. At the city council building, protesters broke windows to get inside the building and occupy it. They chanted "Kyiv is ours" and hung a
Ukrainian flag in a window. The official websites of Ukraine's presidential administration and interior ministry that controls more than 300,000 law enforcement personnel had been down for most of the day. Local media reports claim that hackers are the cause, although no group has taken responsibility for it. The opposition announced a national strike and launched construction of a tent city on Maidan Nezalezhnosti. Writer
Irena Karpa also encouraged the nation to go on general strike – to skip work, boycott Russian products and continue the protests. He later called for the president's resignation, stating "They stole the dream. If this government does not want to fulfill the will of the people, then there will be no such government, there will be no such president. There will be a new government and a new president," he said to cheering crowds. Meanwhile,
Svoboda leader
Oleh Tyahnybok called for a national strike and in an official release called for a "social and national revolution," saying a revolution has started in Ukraine. Opposition leader
Yuriy Lutsenko also called for a revolution to take place, saying "Our plan is clear: this is not a rally, not an action. This – is a revolution," and called to complete the revolutions which took place in
1991 and
2004. ==Injuries==