WASHINGTON, DC -- A senior official in Ukraine's ruling coalition is criticizing  the country's president for a deal to extend the stay of Russia's Black Sea  Fleet at a Ukrainian ports.
Serhey Tihypko, prime minister for economic issues, said in an interview with  The Associated Press that while the deal might make economic sense, President  Viktor Yanukovych should have been more open about the negotiations.
"The  procedure of debating the agreement and completing it behind closed doors is not  what the Ukrainian people want," Tihypko said through an  interpreter.
Tihypko joined the coalition after finishing third during  the first round of the presidential contest in January.
Yanukovych signed  the deal Wednesday with Russian President Dmitry Medvedev to extend the Russian  lease at the port of Sevastopol after the existing lease expires in  2017.
Yanukovych's predecessor, Viktor Yuschenko, had threatened to end  Russia's lease on the strategically important base.
The deal signals that  Yanukovych is looking for closer co-operation with Russia. But Tihypko said that  good relations with Russia will not cause a turning away from the  West.
He said that European integration remained the country's number one  foreign policy priority.
He praised the base deal on economic  terms.
Tihypko said that under the agreement, Ukraine will receive large  discounts on gas shipments in return for extending the lease, which will ease  the country's budget woes.
"From the economic point of view, the latest  agreement on the base is a good one," he said.
Ukraine has been hit by  the global downturn harder than many other European countries. The country was  granted a $16.4 billion bailout loan by the IMF last year.
In October,  the fund halted the fourth and final portion of the loan, worth $3.8 billion,  demanding that the country's leadership resolve its budget  crisis.
Ukraine negotiated the payout of $2 billion in December, but $1.8  billion remains frozen.
Tihypko was in Washington attending meetings of  the IMF and World Bank.
He was expected to meet with IMF Managing  Director Dominique Strauss-Kahn Monday.
Tihypko said that he believe his  country could complete a new agreement with the IMF by June.
 
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