The mayor of Ukraine’s second-largest city was shot in
the back on Monday and pro-Russia insurgents seized yet another
government building as tensions rose in eastern Ukraine ahead of a new
round of U.S. sanctions.
In a bid to ratchet up the
pressure on Russian President Vladimir Putin, President Barack Obama has
promised to levy new sanctions on Russian individuals and companies in
retaliation for Moscow’s alleged provocations in eastern Ukraine.
Officials
have not commented on the circumstances of the shooting and it was not
clear who was behind it. Kernes was a staunch opponent of the pro-West
Maidan movement that toppled President Viktor Yanukovych in February.
Kharkiv
is in eastern Ukraine where pro-Russian gunmen have seized government
buildings, set up roadblocks or staged protests to demand greater
autonomy or outright annexation by Russia.
On
Monday, masked militants with automatic weapons seized another city hall
building in eastern Ukraine, this time in Kostyantynivka, 160
kilometres from the Russian border.
After the
seizure, about 15 armed men guarded the building. Some posed for
pictures with residents while others distributed St. George’s ribbons,
the symbol of the pro-Russia movement.
Kostyantynivka
is just 35 kilometres south of Slovyansk, a major city in eastern
Ukraine that has been in insurgents’ hands for more than three weeks
now.
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