Crimea
military center shooting resembles sniper fire at Kiev’s Maidan
The shooting in the Crimean city of Simferopol bears a strong resemblance to the actions of snipers in central Kiev, as February violent clashes, local prosecution said. Russia considers the shooting that left two killed and two injured a “provocation.”
RT,
19
March, 2014
Speaking
at the press-briefing the next day after the gunfire in Simferopol,
Crimean prosecutor, Natalya Poklonskaya, shed very little light on
what exactly happened outside the Ukrainian military topography and
navigation center.
Stressing
that the investigation is still on-going, she recounted how several
unarmed officers of the Ministry of Defense of Russia had come to
oversee progress on a joint matter regarding mapping. Their visit was
earlier agreed with the commander of the Ukrainian armed forces and
with Kiev.
Several
of their colleagues, who at the time were outside the building of the
compound, were fired upon.
“While
cartographers were on the territory of the center, some self-defense
unit representatives, protecting the center from the outside, came
under fire,” Poklonskaya
said.
Bullets
came from a similar direction, but with varying trajectories,
resulting in the death of two officers on both sides and a further
two injuries.
Single
shots were fired “simultaneously
in the direction of Crimean self-defense units and Ukrainian
servicemen.” Investigators
have found bullets at the scene, but Poklonskaya was reluctant to
reveal what kind of gun was used.
“Experts
familiar with the crime scene believe the crimes perpetrated today
bear a strong resemblance to the actions of snipers on the Maidan on
February 18-21,” she
summed up.
If
this turns out to be the case, she said, it is possible that the
attack was possibly aimed at “provoking
clashes between the servicemen of Ukraine and Crimea.”
Crimean prosecutor, Natalya
Poklonskaya (RIA Novosti / Taras Litvinenko)
Now investigators are working on establishing a number of attackers and their exact location.
Earlier,
the local interior ministry said in a press release that the shoots
came from a house under construction opposite the center.
There
has also been information that a sniper was detained. But later this
information appeared to bebogus.
At
the briefing, the prosecutor stressed that no one had been detained
in connection with the shooting.
Despite
very little details immediately available, shortly after news of the
shooting broke, Western media was fast to point a finger at Russia,
blaming the attack on “pro-Russian
forces.” This
view was shared in Kiev, which in an immediate reaction authorized
Ukrainian troops stationed in Crimea to use firearms to“defend
their lives."
However,
in Russia the shooting is widely seen as a provocation after Crimea
and Sevastopol were accepted into the Russian Federation and the
treaty was signed.
"What
happened in Simferopol yesterday was beyond any doubt a provocation
and its style suggests that the sniper there acted in the same manner
as the ones on Maidan," Russian Black Sea Fleet Commander
Aleksandr Vitko. "Two people died as a result," he
added. "Nonetheless,
the hotheads in the incumbent Ukrainian leadership said something
about permission to shoot. I'd like to warn everyone in this
connection and especially the men and officers of the Ukrainian Naval
Forces, God forbid you to make a single shot, even from a slingshot.
Matches are not toys, and I'd like to ask everyone to understand it
in the very literal sense."
The
situation in Crimea was discussed in NATO between Russia’s
Ambassador to the Alliance and its military officials.
"We
have informed them that we see this incident as a provocation. The
Russian troops were not involved in it; there was no storming of the
Ukrainian military base as claimed by the authorities in Kiev. The
incident is now being investigated, those guilty will not walk away
from the responsibility," Russian
Ambassador to NATO, Aleksandr Grushko, was cited by Interfax as
saying.
Crimean
authorities have shared this stance, saying that the shooting in
Simferopol was indeed a provocation aimed at spreading a “spirit
of hatred and fear.”
“Such
provocative tactics of putting in confrontation opposing parties was
systematically employed at Maidan in Kiev. In a similar way
provocateurs are trying to blow up the peace and harmony in our
house,”Crimean
Prime Minister Sergey Aksyonov said.
Meanwhile,
the Ukrainian coup-appointed Ministry of Foreign Affairs has sent a
note of protest to Russia following the death of a Ukrainian soldier
in Simferopol.
“Today
he [the Russian charge d'affaires in Kiev, Andrey Vorobyev] was once
again given a note against provoking armed incidents, violence and
murder of Ukrainian soldiers," the
Ministry said.
A
criminal case has been launched after the shooting and the charges
are in line with Article 115 of the Ukrainian criminal code –
murder. But there is still a lot that is unclear about the attack. It
was even less known on the evening it took place.
This,
however, was not an obstacle for a stream of conflicting reports,
speculating that Russian forces were “storming
the base.”
RT’s
team was one of the first to arrive at the scene. As they came to the
base, RT producer, Lida Vasilevskaya, reported the center was already
surrounded by men in camouflage and the situation was"calm."
She
learned that the majority of the staff working at the military
topography research center are women. The center’s area is rather
small, and servicemen have only six machine guns and three Makarov
guns to provide security.
It
was confirmed to RT that the shooting did take place, but by that
time it was unclear where the shooting had come from. This is yet to
be investigated.
Blame game backfire: US
State Dept's Psaki in
Simferopol bullet dodge
State Dept's Psaki in
Simferopol bullet dodge
Two people - a self-defense member and a Ukrainian soldier - were killed at a Ukrainian military map center Tuesday. Witnesses claim shots came from a possible sniper who opened fire from a partially inhabited building. Nevertheless US State Dept spokesperson Jen Psaki tweeted that Russia was responsible and 'shot first'. RT's Anastasia Churkina asks Ms Psaki to clarify her allegations at US Press Briefing.
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