Wednesday, April 30, 2014

Ukraine crisis: Kharkiv mayor transferred to Israel for treatment after assassination attempt



April 30 (Brisbane Times) Kharkiv mayor Gennady Kernes may have been able to see the person who shot him, one of the surgeons who operated on him yesterday following the attempted assassination has said.
Dr Andrey Kozachenko, deputy head of Meschaninov Emergency Aid Hospital said the gunman would have been in front of Mr Kernes based on the entry and exit wounds caused by the bullet, contrary to initial reports in which a witness described Mr Kernes being shot in the back. “Yes, he was shot in the front,” Dr Kozachenko said on Tuesday morning, after he assisted in yesterday’s surgery. The bullet entered Mr Kernes’ front left side, destroying one of his adrenal glands and causing damage to his stomach and muscle around the spinal cord, before exiting his back, he said.
“Fortunately not the liver, fortunately not the heart, fortunately not the kidney … fortunately not any major organs,” Dr Kozachenko said. Mr Kernes might have been able to see the shooter and identify them when he recovers, Dr Kozachenko said, although the mayor would be facing a recovery of perhaps half a year. Dr Kozachenko said Mr Kernes, who is Jewish, was transferred to a hospital in Israel at about 3am in a stable condition for further operations.
He said he wasn’t sure which exact hospital Mr Kernes was transferred to, but thought it was one in Haifa because it was close to the border with Syria and the doctors there would have treated thousands of gunshot wounds. Yury Sydorenko, director of information at the council, said Israeli doctors decided after examining his wounds that Mr Kernes could be transported and he was flown out early on Tuesday. He is now being treated at Elisha, a private hospital in the northern city of Haifa.

Tuesday, April 22, 2014

Ukraine: Photos 'show Russian troops' in east

April 21 (BBC News Europe) The US State Department has released photos of soldiers in eastern Ukraine, which it says show that some of the fighters are Russian special forces. The BBC is unable to verify the pictures, which were provided by Ukrainian diplomats. The photos appeared to identify Russian soldiers, and show similarly equipped and armed fighters in different cities in eastern Ukraine. There was no immediate response to the pictures from the Russian government. Pro-Russian militants are holding official buildings in towns and cities in the east. However, Russia has denied it has any soldiers in Ukraine. The photos, provided to the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe, appeared to show the same man taking part in operations in Kramatorsk and Sloviansk in eastern Ukraine, and in operations in Georgia in 2008.
Diplomats said the soldier circled in red was seen in both Kramatorsk and Sloviansk, and in a photo (centre) showing a group in the Russian Special Forces


Ukrainian diplomats said the fighters in Kramatorsk (left) and Sloviansk were similarly equipped and armed
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Thursday, April 17, 2014

The bloody fighting in Mariupol

April 17 (BBC News Europe) Three pro-Russian separatists have been shot dead in a clash with Ukrainian forces in Mariupol, near the Azov Sea, Ukraine's interior minister says. Separatists attacked a military unit in Mariupol overnight and troops opened fire, killing three, Interior Minister Arsen Avakov said in a Facebook post on Thursday. According to Mr Avakov, 13 of the attackers were wounded and so far 63 have been detained. He said none of the interior ministry troops had been killed. Mariupol is in the far south of Donetsk region, where separatists have seized dozens of official buildings. The operation is continuing - Ukraine has sent in reinforcements including helicopters. There was no independent confirmation of his statement. 
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Sunday, April 13, 2014

Ukraine 'bid to take back Sloviansk police HQ'



April 13 (BBC News Europe) On Saturday, armed men took over police stations and official buildings in Sloviansk and two other eastern towns - Kramatorsk and Druzhkovka. Similar reports emerged from Sloviansk and Kramatorsk of armed men dressed in camouflage arriving in buses and storming the police stations. Pro-Russian demonstrators also continued their occupation of the main administrative building in the regional capital Donetsk, which they have held for one week. A protest leader told the BBC that the activists in Sloviansk took action to support the Donetsk sit-in. Eastern Ukraine has a large Russian-speaking population and has seen a series of protests since the ousting of Ukraine's pro-Russian President Viktor Yanukovych in February.
Ukrainian forces have launched an operation against pro-Russian activists who seized a police station on Saturday, the interior minister says. Arsen Avakov announced on his Facebook page that "all security units" were involved in an "anti-terror operation" in the eastern city of Sloviansk.
Russia warned earlier that any use of force in eastern Ukraine could scupper crisis talks due later this week. The US accuses Moscow of inciting the trouble. The Kremlin denies the charge. Russia's Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said the Kiev government was "demonstrating its inability to take responsibility for the fate of the country".
Four-party talks involving Ukraine, Russia, the US and the EU are due to start in Geneva on Thursday. Busloads of armed men


A small group of gunmen took over the police station in Sloviansk on Saturday

Friday, April 11, 2014

In pictures: Russian military build-up near Ukraine

April 11 (BBC News Europe) Nato's decision to release over 20 satellite images and associated maps of the Russian military build-up on Ukraine's eastern frontier is a signal of the concern among the alliance's commanders that a Russian military option against Ukraine is very much on the table, the BBC's diplomatic correspondent Jonathan Marcus reports.

The imagery issued by Nato's Supreme Headquarters Allied Powers Europe (Shape) reportedly dates from late March and early April. It encompasses five locations in an arc around Ukraine's frontier. Imagery from a sixth site was provided by Airbus Defence and Space.
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Thursday, April 10, 2014

Ukraine crisis: Coal miners' thoughts on future

April 10 (BBC News Europe) In eastern Ukraine pro Russia activists continue to occupy government buildings in two cities - Luhansk and Donetsk. This region is important as Ukraine's industrial heartland. The BBC's Steve Rosenberg has been finding out what coal miners in Donetsk think about the crisis.

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Tuesday, April 8, 2014

Russian debate: Invade or persuade?

April 8 (BBC News Europe) Tensions are rising in the eastern Ukrainian cities of Kharkiv, Luhansk and Donetsk, as pro-Russian demonstrators occupy government buildings. Meanwhile, the Russian media look on and mull whether it's time for their country to step in - or even to annex more of its neighbour's territory.

Russian militants are raising the stakes in eastern Ukraine

"Current events hardly seem real," writes Dimitriy Durnev in Novyye Izvestiya, "and reminds one a lot of a film." Mikhail Rostovskiy in Russian daily Moskovskiy Komsomolets calls the situation "a tornado, a hurricane that sweeps away everything in its path and does not recognize any state borders". He continues:
The east of Ukraine was not the one to throw the first stone in the conflict. It only took on a challenge that it was confronted with. The east of Ukraine is trying to talk to the west of Ukraine in the only language the latter understands... The inevitable conclusion is that it is time for Ukrainian servants of the people from all regions to again start mastering the political art that has been completely lost in the country - the art of negotiating.
Russian author and political dissident Eduard Limonov writes in Izvestiya that he is not surprised by the recent turn of events.
"I predicted many years ago that the independence Ukraine got for free might not stand the first serious endurance test. And this is exactly what has happened," he writes.
What occurs next, he continues, is up to Russian President Vladimir Putin.
"I advise him to make Donbass [in eastern Ukraine] part of Russia," he says. "The West will not hamper this. And relations with them have been spoilt forever. We understood that they wanted to make Ukraine a base for attacking Russia and to take hostage eight million Russians living in Ukraine. This will not happen."
Russia is facing a "difficult choice", writes Sergey Frolov in Trud:
Diplomatic methods of settling the intensifying crisis in Ukraine are still available. But if Kiev decides to play an all-or-nothing game and blood is shed in the south-east, talk will be of no use any more... The key thing is obvious: Ukraine is missing its last chance to preserve its statehood and territorial integrity.
Kirill Khartyan in Vedmosti agrees that Mr Putin is confronting an "unpleasant dilemma":
Suffer sanctions - even from Germany, which has proved most loyal in the given circumstances - that would extend beyond the Ozero cooperative [nickname for businessmen close to Mr Putin] and would most certainly worsen the already not-so-brilliant situation in the Russian economy, or disappoint overjoyed Russians who, having got the gift of Crimea, are prepared for new gifts. I think in the vision of values held by the Russian leader the second option is much worse.
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