Things
are definitely heating up in the Ukraine. Putin has 150,000
troops ready on the border
Armed men seize Crimea parliament and hoist Russian flag
Ukraine crisis escalates after Tatar leader says Crimea’s parliament building has been occupied by gunmen
27
February, 2014
Armed
men have seized the government buildings in the capital of the
Ukraine’s Crimea region and hoisted a Russian flag over a
barricade.
The
men occupying the parliament building in the regional capital,
Simferopol, early on Thursday did not come out to voice any demands.
They wore black and orange ribbons, a Russian symbol of the victory
in World War II. The men also put up a sign saying “Crimea is
Russia.”
They
threw a flash grenade in response to a journalist’s questions.
Phone calls to region’s legislature rang unanswered, and its
website was down.
Ethnic
Tatars who support Ukraine’s new leaders and pro-Russia separatists
had confronted each other outside the regional parliament on
Wednesday.
Interfax
quoted a local Tatar leader, Refat Chubarov, as saying on Facebook:
“I have been told that the buildings of parliament and the council
of ministers have been occupied by armed men in uniforms that do not
bear any recognisable insignia.”
“They
have not yet made any demands,” he said.
About
100 police were gathered in front of the parliament building. Doors
into the building appeared to have been blocked by wooden crates.
The
streets around the parliament were mostly empty apart from people
going to work.
“I
heard gunfire in the night, came down and saw lots of people going
in. Some then left. I’m not sure how many are still in there,”
said a 30-year-old man who gave his name only as Roman.
Ukrainian
President Viktor Yanukovich was ousted on Saturday after three months
of unrest led by protesters in Kiev.
He
is now on the run being sought by the new authorities for murder in
connection with the deaths of around 100 people during the conflict.
Crimea
was transferred from Russia to Ukraine in 1954 in the Soviet-era by
then Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev.
With
a part of Russia’s Black Sea fleet based in the port of Sevastopol,
it is the only region of Ukraine where ethnic Russians dominate in
numbers, although many ethnic Ukrainians in other eastern areas speak
Russian as their first language.
With
Crimea now the last big bastion of opposition to the new
post-Yanukovich political order in Kiev, Ukraine’s new leaders have
been voicing alarm over signs of separatism there.
The
Tatars, a Turkic ethnic group, were victimised by Soviet dictator
Josef Stalin in World War Two and deported en masse to Soviet Central
Asia in 1944 on suspicion of collaborating with Nazi Germany.
Tens
of thousands of them returned to their homeland after Ukraine gained
independence with the collapse of the Soviet Union at the end of
1991.
Amid
mounting tension in the region, Russia ordered 150,000 troops to test
their combat readiness on Wednesday in a show of force that prompted
a blunt warning from the United States that any military intervention
in Ukraine would be a “grave mistake.”
Putin
put the military on alert for massive exercises involving most of the
military units in western Russia, and announced measures to tighten
security at the headquarters of Russia’s Black Sea Fleet on
Ukraine’s Crimea peninsula.
The
manoeuvres will involve some 150,000 troops, 880 tanks, 90 aircraft
and 80 navy ships, and are intended to “check the troops’
readiness for action in crisis situations that threaten the nation’s
military security,” defence minister Sergei Shoigu said in remarks
carried by Russian news agencies.
Vladimir
Putin’s announcement of huge new war games came as Ukraine’s
protest leaders named a millionaire former banker to head a new
government after the pro-Russian president went into hiding.
The
new government, which is expected to be formally approved by
parliament Thursday, will face the hugely complicated task of
restoring stability in a country that is not only deeply divided
politically but on the verge of financial collapse.
In
Kiev’s Independence Square, the heart of the protest movement
against Yanukovych, the interim leaders who seized control after he
disappeared proposed Arseniy Yatsenyuk as the country’s new prime
minister.
The
39-year-old served as economy minister, foreign minister and
parliamentary speaker before Yanukovych took office in 2010, and is
widely viewed as a technocratic reformer who enjoys the support of
the U.S.
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