Firefighters evacuate an injured man outside the burnt trade union building where more than 30 people died trying to escape during clashes in Odessa, Ukraine, on Friday, May 2, 2014. Odessa had been largely tranquil since the February toppling of President Viktor Yanukovych, who fled to Russia. But clashes erupted Friday between pro-Russians and government supporters in the key port on the Black Sea coast, located 550 kilometers (330 miles) from the turmoil in the east. |
SLOVYANSK,
Ukraine (AP) -- Ukraine launched an offensive against separatist
forces for control of a besieged eastern city Friday, while clashes
between pro- and anti-government activists in the previously calm
southern port of Odessa led to a fire that police said killed 31 people.
The
first serious offensive by the government in Kiev and the dozens of
deaths in Odessa sharply escalated the crisis that has led to the worst
tensions between Russia and the West since the Cold war. The Kremlin
said the battle for the separatist-held city of Slovyansk effectively
destroyed the Geneva pact aimed at cooling the unrest in the deeply
divided country.
Oleksandr Turchynov,
Ukraine's acting president, said many insurgents were killed or wounded
in the eastern offensive that also underlined the military's
vulnerability. The military action came two days after Kiev said it had
lost control of eastern Ukraine.
Both sides
said two Ukrainian helicopters were shot down by the insurgents near
Slovyansk, killing two crew members, while authorities said another
seven people also died: three separatist gunmen, two soldiers and two
civilians.
By nightfall, Ukrainian troops and
armored personnel carriers blocked all major roads into Slovyansk, and
the central part of the city remained in the hands of pro-Russia gunmen,
according to Associated Press journalists inside. Most shops were
closed, and the few that were open were crowded with customers stocking
up on supplies.
Sporadic gunfire was heard in
Slovyansk's downtown late Friday, while Russian news reports said there
were armed clashes in the nearby town of Kramatorsk. There was no
immediate independent confirmation of fighting.
The
Ukrainian Security Service said one helicopter was downed with a
surface-to-air missile, adding that the sophisticated weapon undercut
Russia's claims the city of 125,000 people was simply under the control
of armed locals.
"Ukrainian security forces so
far are not ready for large-scale military actions; moreover, such
actions could provoke Russia's invasion," said Kiev-based political
analyst Volodymyr Fesenko.
Russia has massed
tens of thousands of troops in areas near Ukraine's border. Kiev claims
Moscow is preparing to invade and that it is fomenting the unrest in the
east, where insurgents have seized government buildings in about a
dozen cities and towns. The Kremlin denies the allegations, but Foreign
Minister Sergey Lavrov has warned Russia would respond to attacks on its
citizens or interests in the east.
Unlike
eastern Ukraine, Odessa had been largely tranquil since the February
toppling of President Viktor Yanukovych, who fled to Russia. But clashes
erupted Friday between pro-Russians and government supporters in the
key port on the Black Sea coast, located 550 kilometers (330 miles) from
the turmoil in the east.
Police said the
deadly fire broke out in a trade union building, but did not give
details on how it started. Earlier, police said at least three people
had died in a clash between the two sides in the city of 1 million.
According
to Ukrainian news reports, the pro-Kiev demonstrators broke up an
encampment of Moscow supporters outside the trade union building. The
latter took refuge in the building, which then caught fire.
Odessa
police spokesman Volodymyr Shasbliyenko told AP the fire apparently was
caused by Molotov cocktails. He had no further details or identities of
the victims.
Russia's Foreign Ministry said
the fatal fire was "yet another manifestation of the criminal
irresponsibility of the Kiev authorities who indulge insolent radical
nationalists ... which are engaging in a campaign of physical terror"
against those in Ukraine who want more autonomy for the pro-Moscow
regions.
A spokesman for Russian President
Vladimir Putin said the Ukrainian offensive "effectively destroyed the
last hope for the implementation of the Geneva agreement" of two weeks
ago that aimed to defuse the crisis. But Dmitry Peskov also said Russia
"continues to undertake consistent efforts on de-escalation."
In
Washington, German Chancellor Angela Merkel and President Barack Obama
warned that Russia could be hit by new sanctions from the U.S. and the
European Union if it continues disruptive actions in Ukraine. Previous
sanctions are showing signs of significant effect on the Russian
economy.
The fighting in Slovyansk, a city
about 160 kilometers (100 miles) from the Russian border, broke out
around dawn. Stella Khorosheva, a spokeswoman for the insurgents, said
three fighters and two civilians were killed in the clashes.
The
Russian state television channel Rossiya-24 showed one man who they
said was a wounded helicopter pilot surrounded by pro-Russia forces.
Several
foreign news crews, meanwhile, were detained for several hours Friday
by nervous pro-Russia militia before being released. CBS reported that
one journalist was beaten.
Slovyansk is
strategically key because Ukraine has a huge stockpile of automatic
rifles and other light weapons near the city, according to a commentary
Friday for Britain's Royal United Services Institute defense think-tank.
"Today,
Kiev has upped the ante in the standoff and will test Russian resolve
to prevent the Ukrainian government from regaining control of the city
and its light weapons stockpile," the think-tank authors wrote.
Turchynov
said some government troops and police in eastern Ukraine were "either
helping or cooperating with terrorist organizations." He said Ukrainian
forces were working to prevent the unrest from spreading other areas.
At Russia's request, the U.N. Security Council met in an emergency session Friday on Ukraine.
Russian
ambassador Vitaly Churkin demanded a "swift halt of all violence," but
Western powers scoffed at his country's indignation.
"Russia
... has released bands of thugs on Ukraine ... and is suddenly
discovering this mixture might escape its control," French ambassador
Gerard Araud said.
Ukraine, a nation of 46
million, is torn between those in the west who favor closer ties with
Europe and many Russian-speakers in the east who look toward Moscow.
Separatists who have seized government buildings in at least 10 eastern
cities amid fears that Moscow is seeking a pretext to invade or annex
more territory like it did with Ukraine's Black Sea peninsula of Crimea
in March.
The peace deal in Geneva last month
aimed to get those who had seized government buildings in Ukraine to
leave and calm down the tensions that have prompted the United States
and the European Union to slap Russia with rounds of sanctions.
The
Russian Foreign Ministry accused Ukraine's government of using
"terrorists" from ultranationalist organizations for Friday's military
operation. It also claimed that Kiev deployed tanks and helicopters that
were "conducting missile strikes on protesters," something that neither
side in Ukraine reported.
An AP crew also saw no evidence of missile strikes in Slovyansk.
Russia
also cited insurgents in Ukraine as saying that some of the government
attackers spoke English - an insinuation that the Ukrainian military was
getting help from the West.
TV crews from Sky
News and CBS were detained Friday on the outskirts of Slovyansk. Sky
News said in a statement its crew was detained for several hours but is
now "safe and well."
CBS correspondent
Clarissa Ward told "CBS This Morning" that she and her crew were stopped
by pro-Russia insurgents at a checkpoint just outside Slovyansk, then
taken to a nearby town where they were blindfolded tightly with masking
tape. They were released several hours later, unharmed except for one
man who was beaten.
Kiev's interim government
came to power after Yanukovych fled, drummed out by months of
anti-government protests. Ukraine plans to hold a presidential election
on May 25.