The
text messages sent to participants appeared to have little effect on
a crowd that is angry and increasingly prone to violence.
Yuri
Maslovsky, a 38-year-old from Kharkiv who travelled to Kiev to take
part in the protests, said he had read about the text messages from
his Facebook friends.
"I
think these texts are stupid and are targeting people who are easily
scared. They are not going to scare off the people who are already
protesting."
It
was not immediately clear how the messages had been distributed. The
interior ministry denied involvement, though said it was studying
video footage to determine the most "active participants"
in the riots and arrest them.
Telephone
provider MTS issued a statement saying it had not been responsible
for sending out the messages. "Today we started receiving
complaints from users in central Kiev who all received SMS messages
from the number 111, containing identical text. We have nothing to do
with the distribution."
Another
provider, Kyivstar, also said it was innocent of involvement. A
statement said: "We strictly observe the confidentiality of our
users, their telephone numbers and locations … We know that
there is equipment, so-called 'pirate base stations', which allow SMS
distribution or calls to all mobile telephone numbers of all
operators within a particular area. But, as an operator, we are
unable to identify the activity of these stations."
Members
of the Ukrainian riot police are caught in a fire caused by gasoline
bombs hurled
by anti-government protesters. Photograph: Anadolu
Agency/Getty Images
On
Independence Square, a representative of the impromptu medical
service set up to help wounded protesters said he believed that their
telephone lines were being monitored by authorities, and advised all
of those injured to leave hospital if at all possible.
Oleksandr
Shevchenko, a 59-year-old physicist from Kharkiv, said from his
hospital bed that he did not take part in clashes but was trying to
remove a fence that was hindering the passage of protesters, when he
was shot in the face with a rubber bullet.
"I
saw blood and went to the medical workers, who brought me to
hospital," he said, a huge bruise on his right cheek. The
doctors fear that the bullet has damaged his facial nerve. He has
been questioned by the police twice as a victim of the clashes, but
his lawyer advised him to leave the hospital as soon as possible as
the police may accuse him of being a participant.
A
top aide to Yanukovych ruled out declaring a state of emergency on
Tuesday, but with both sides locked in a stalemate, more violence
appears likely in the coming days.
The
president has said he will meet a trio of opposition leaders
including former heavyweight boxer Vitali Klitschko for talks, but no
date has been set and the announcement has been dismissed as an
attempt to buy time.
Klitschko
went to see Yanukovych for crisis talks on Tuesday, but said that
when he arrived, he was told by an aide that the president was busy.
Former
heavyweight boxer Vitali Klitschko. Photograph: AP
"I
turned around and left," said Klitschko.
In
Moscow, Russia's foreign minister, Sergei Lavrov, said that the
situation in Kiev threatened to "spin out of control", and
said European politicians who have travelled to Kiev and voiced their
support for protesters were fuelling the clashes.
Lavrov
pointed out that the protesters had occupied government buildings for
weeks and entrenched themselves in a central square, as well as using
molotov cocktails and other weapons against police in recent days.
He
said: "When something like this happens within a European
country, no one questions the need to curb the disorder and violence
with firm measures."
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