Disgusting propaganda - straight from the Kyiv Post
No ultra-nationalists or Right Sector - just kind Ukrainians rescuing people from the building. Why do we not see this in the videos, which paint a different picture.
How
did Odessa's fire
happen?
Forty-two
people trapped by a fire on the third floor of the stately,
Soviet-era Trades Unions building burned, suffocated or jumped to
their deaths. How did the victims come to be in the building and who
started the fire?
The
violence erupted as fans marching before a football match were
ambushed by pro-Russian activists, eyewitnesses say.
Local
side Chornomorets were playing Metalist Kharkiv.
Hardline
fans - known as "ultras" - of both teams agreed to hold a
joint march to support a united Ukraine.
The
group gathered at about 14:00 in Cathedral Square. Some were veteran
supporters of Kiev's Maidan protest movement - the Maidan Self
Defence Forces - and/or part of the right-wing Pravy
Sektor (Right Sector).
But eyewitness accounts and videos suggest that many were just
ordinary members of the public.
Some
pro-Russian activists carried guns and fired shots during the rioting
The
marchers may have suspected trouble in a city with an ethnic Russian
minority of around 30%.
But
as Chornomorets supporter Nadiya Yashan told Ukrainian television:
"We never expected an ambush on such a scale and the police to
do so little."
Tensions
were already running high in Odessa because pro-Russian opponents of
the Maidan had been camping in a central square - Kulykove Pole -
since the February protests which ousted President Viktor Yanukovych
in Kiev.
Only
days before the Odessa violence, in the eastern city of Donetsk,
armed pro-Russian militants had attacked a peaceful pro-Maidan march.
Some
of the pro-Ukrainian marchers' rivals in Odessa were wearing
orange and black stripes on their clothing -
the so-called Ribbon of St George, one of the most recognised symbols
of military valour in Russia. The ribbon is now an emblem worn by
pro-Russian separatists in eastern Ukraine.
Bogdan,
who was part of the fans' march, told the BBC: "People started
to walk, they were attacked by these guys in army helmets with
baseball bats. Some of them had guns."
The
clashes appeared to begin on Grecheskaya/Hretska (Greek) Street.
A video
on YouTube purporting
to show the start of the violence suggests that police stood by as
pro-Russian activists armed themselves with batons and other weapons.
The
same video also shows many pro-Ukrainian marchers later smashing
paving stones and hurling them at the pro-Russian crowd.
Eyewitness
Serhiy told the BBC he saw a newsflash on TV at 15:50 local time
about clashes there and went to the scene.
Petrol
bombs were thrown at those inside the building but did they start the
third floor fire?
"It
wasn't like close, hand-to-hand combat. It was mostly throwing of
pavement blocks by both sides," he said.
Other
reports suggested some of the activists on both sides were well-armed
and well-protected - clubs, metal bars, air pistols, baseball bats
and body armour, shields and helmets.
An
amateur YouTube video appears to show a line of riot police shielding
pro-Russian activists, one
of whom fires a gun while
chunks of paving stone rain down from the crowd on the other side.
A
number of reports also spoke of armed protesters using the rooftop of
the Afina shopping centre to fire pistols and throw Molotov
cocktails.
There
seems little doubt that the gunshots - and reports of casualties -
fuelled the anger of the pro-Ukrainian crowd.
Serhiy
spoke of a "see-saw battle" of about 15 minutes, before the
"pro-separatists" started to withdraw.
Police
said at least three people were shot dead in the running battles
before the deadly fire at the Trade Unions House.
Over
the next few hours the clashes fragmented but a key development
appeared to be a move by pro-Ukrainians against the tent city in
Kulykovo Pole square.
Serhiy
said: "People started streaming toward the station, taking
Zhukovskoho Street and then taking Pushkinska Street. They chanted
'Long live Ukraine!' and 'Odessa is Ukrainian!'."
He
said tents in the pro-Russian camp were burning when he arrived and
those there had moved to the entrance of the nearby Trade Unions
House.
"Eventually,
they were driven in," he said.
Some
were rescued from the union building by ladders but others fell to
their death
By
his estimate there were several thousand football fans and about 300
pro-Russians.
There
was hand-to-hand fighting in the building although, again, it
appeared the police did little to intervene.
Television
pictures and reports suggest both sides were throwing Molotov
cocktails.
Flowers
are brought to the building to remember the dead
Pro-Ukrainians
reported that the pro-Russians were armed and firing pistols and
rifles from the upper floors.
Russia
Today carried video of
a man in a bulletproof vest shooting up at people in the burning
building.
Pictures
clearly showed pro-Ukrainians throwing Molotov cocktails towards the
floor.
But
Serhiy said he saw someone "on the third floor throw a Molotov
cocktail through the closed window. However, the glass didn't break
and a fire started inside".
People
struggled to get out of the smoke-filled floor.
One
survivor told Russia Today: "We couldn't go down, we were seeing
people from other floors being brought down and then those rioters
down there attacked them like a pack of wolves."
But
other eyewitness reports, for
example in the Kyiv Post, said
pro-Ukrainian activists rescued dozens of people from the burning
building.
Some
people got to ledges and were helped by ambulance ladders. Some fell.
Some
people were reported to have shouted "die" as people fell.
One
of those who had been at the building, Anatoly, said the people
inside were not "pro-Russian activists".
Anger
over the deaths sparked a rally at the police HQ on Sunday
He
told the BBC:
"We are from Odessa. It's just about Odessa, about peace. It was
horror. It was annihilation of people believed to be separatists. But
I am not separatist, I was born in Odessa."
Over
the next 48 hours, there appeared to be some respite - both sides
bringing flowers to honour the dead.
In
the aftermath, Ukraine's Prime Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk had some
angry words for the security forces, saying they were "inefficient
and they violated the law".
He
promised a full investigation - right down to "every single
police officer". He also said international experts would help
to get to the truth of what happened, to make the inquiry
transparent.
The
failings of the security forces appear to be one of the few things
people agree on.
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