KIEV, Ukraine -- UEFA president Michel Platini on Thursday gave the Ukrainian  government two months to show signs Kiev would be able to catch up on  preparations for co-hosting the Euro 2012 soccer tournament.
Platini, ending a two-day trip in which he toured Ukraine's four host cities,  said he had spelled this out to President Viktor Yanukovich in a meeting,  although in response to a journalist's question, he denied it amounted to an  ultimatum.
"I told him we need guarantees from the government on going  forward and I told him that in the next two months we would like to see strong  signs of advancing," Platini told journalists after a half-hour meeting with  Yanukovich.
"President Yanukovich gave guarantees that the work would be  done and that he would do everything for the government to follow this," he  said.
Economic troubles, a severe winter and political tension have led  to long delays in preparations by the ex-Soviet republic of Ukraine ahead of the  16-nation tournament which it is co-hosting with neighbouring  Poland.
Building work is five months behind schedule with particular  problems in the stadium of the capital Kiev, which is due to stage the final,  and the western city of Lviv. The other two Ukrainian host cities are Kharkiv  and Donetsk in the east.
Platini repeated that the executive committee of  UEFA had said if the Kiev stadium was not ready, the Euro tournament would not  take place in Ukraine.
Asked what contingency UEFA might be planning, he  said: "There is no Plan B ... no Plan C", but he also said UEFA could not afford  to wait one and a half years to make a final decision.
Yanukovich, who  earlier this month conceded that preparations were "in terrible shape", told  Platini Ukraine would now "move into top gear and catch up on  delays."
With the honour of Ukraine at stake he would now be monitoring  preparations personally, his press service quoted him as telling  Platini.
Ukraine has already announced weekly auctions of treasury bills  to help raise cash for Euro 2012 -- effectively adding to rising domestic debt  problems. It also plans to launch a national lottery later this  year.
Euro 2012 minister Borys Kolesnikov has announced government plans  to stump up 26 billion hryvnias ($3.3 billion) from the 2010 state budget to  help modernise stadiums, develop airport infrastructure and build  roads.
Yanukovich has said that it will cost 40 billion hryvnia to catch  up on the delay.
 
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