The western narrative is that violence in the eastern Ukraine is all being orchestrated by Moscow. Of course, the evil Putin is behind it all.
Moscow accuses Kiev of issuing 'criminal orders' and warns of civil war
Moscow accuses Kiev of issuing 'criminal orders' and warns of civil war
Russia
orchestrating latest violence in east Ukraine and is staging another
Crimea-syle intervention, claims US and Nato
13
April, 2014
The
crisis in Ukraine escalated dramatically on Sunday night as Russia
accused Kiev of issuing a "criminal order" against
protesters and warned of a civil war in the country, which has been
hit by a wave of unrest that America believes has been orchestrated
from Moscow.
The
Russian statement came after unknown armed men attacked a convoy of
Ukrainian troops in Slaviansk, about 100 miles from the border,
launching the first gun battle in Ukraine since the standoff began,
in which at least one person was killed. Both the US and Nato accused
Russia of staging another Crimea-style intervention, with Samantha
Power, the US ambassador to the United Nations, saying events were
following the same pattern as in Crimea, where unidentified military
forces took over government installations before the peninsula was in
effect annexed last month.
"[The
unrest] is professional, it's co-ordinated, there is nothing
grassroots-seeming about it," Power said. "The forces are
doing, in each of the six or seven cities they've been active in,
exactly the same thing. Certainly it bears the telltale signs of
Moscow's involvement," she told ABC's This Week.
The
Nato secretary general, Anders Fogh Rasmussen, described the protests
as "a concerted campaign of violence by pro-Russian separatists,
aiming to destabilise Ukraine as a sovereign state".
He
said the appearance of men carrying Russian weapons and wearing
uniforms without insignia was a "grave development" and
called on Russia to pull back its troops from Ukraine's border.
Ukraine's
acting president, Oleksandr Turchynov, went on television on Sunday
night to announce that the army would take part in a "large-scale
anti-terrorist operation" against the protesters, adding: "We're
not going to allow Russia to repeat the Crimean scenario in Ukraine's
east." He set a deadline of 6am GMT for the separatists to give
up their weapons.
But
the Russian foreign ministry said the west should bring its allies in
Ukraine's government under control. "It is now the west's
responsibility to prevent civil war in Ukraine," the ministry
said in a statement on Facebook. "The situation in south-eastern
Ukraine is taking on an extremely dangerous character. We decisively
condemn attempts to use brute force against protesters and activists
… We are particularly indignant about the criminal order [by
Turchynov] to use the army to put down protest."
Alarm
at Moscow's behaviour is certain to dominate discussions on Monday
when EU foreign ministers, including Britain's William Hague, meet to
discuss the crisis. Lady Ashton, the EU's foreign policy chief, said
she was "gravely concerned".
Britain
also called on Moscow to disown the rebels. "Assumptions that
Russia is complicit are inevitable as long as Moscow does not
publicly distance itself from these latest lawless actions," a
Foreign Office spokesman said.
Washington
and Moscow have maintained regular dialogue throughout the crisis and
on Saturday John Kerry, the US secretary of state, spoke by telephone
to Russia's foreign minister, Sergei Lavrov.
A
senior state department official said Kerry expressed strong concern
that attacks by "armed militants" in eastern Ukraine had
been "orchestrated and synchronised". "The secretary
made clear that if Russia did not take steps to de-escalate in
eastern Ukraine and move its troops back from Ukraine's border, there
would be additional consequences."
Sanctions
imposed on Russia by the US and western allies have so far been
restricted to visa bans and asset freezes targeting senior officials
in Moscow accused of undermining Ukraine's sovereignty. However,
Washington has repeatedly warned those could be expanded to include
far-reaching sanctions attacking Russia's banking, energy and mining
sectors.
The
White House announced at the weekend that the US vice-president, Joe
Biden, will travel to Kiev this month in a show of solidarity with
the country's new government, which is planning presidential
elections in May.
Ukrainian
President promises punishment for violent protesters
Donetsk, Ukraine (CNN) -- Ukraine's acting President Oleksandr Turchynov issued a promise of amnesty for pro-Russia separatists in eastern Ukraine on Sunday but warned that anyone who continues to support the takeover of government buildings would be held responsible for their actions.
"We'll not allow any repetition of the Crimean scenario in the east of Ukraine. I have signed a decree that would allow those who did not shoot at our officers to lay down their arms and leave the occupied buildings by Monday morning without fear of being prosecuted," he told a national television audience, according to a CNN translation.
Turchynov added that anyone who supports violence will be punished.
"We are ready to consider a significant expansion of regional powers of all regions and the wider reform of local self-government. However, all those supporting aggressors and occupiers in an armed struggle against our country will not escape punishment and will be prosecuted," he said.
He said Russia was responsible for bloodshed; at least one Ukrainian soldier was killed in clashes between pro-Ukrainian crowds and pro-Russian separatists, a high-level source in Ukraine's Security Services told CNN.
Paul Barton was, until fairly recently an RT correspondent who gave fairly balanced reports. Now he has popped up on Radio New Zealand as a correspondent. He is now right up there with the rest of the presstitutes. I wonder who is paying the piper.
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