AP
Pro-Russian activists set their flags over the entrance to the regional administration building in Donetsk, Ukraine on Tuesday.
Russia warned Ukraine’s authorities that the use of
force to suppress protests in the Russian-speaking eastern regions could
trigger civil war.
Moscow voiced particular concern
over the deployment in the east of ‘about 150’ American mercenaries from
the Greystone private army disguised as Ukrainian military personnel.
Kiev
has reportedly sent army and national guard forces to eastern Ukraine
to quell pro-Russian protests. On Monday protesters in Donetsk
proclaimed the region’s independence from Ukraine and called for a
referendum to join Russia.
“We are calling for the
immediate cessation of any military preparations, which are fraught with
unleashing civil war,” the Russian Foreign Ministry said in a statement
on Tuesday.
Late on Monday Ukrainian security forces
evicted pro-Russian protesters from the local government headquarters
in Kharkiv and the Ukrainian security service building in Donetsk which
had been captured on Sunday, the government in Kiev announced. However,
protesters continued to occupy the security services headquarters in
Lugansk. They have armed themselves with firearms seized from the
arsenal in the building.
Ukraine’s Interior Minister Avakov said on Tuesday about 70 ‘separatists’ had been detained in Kharkiv.
“An
anti-terrorist operation has been launched. The city centre is blocked
along with metro stations. Do not worry. Once we finish, we will open
them again,” he wrote on his Facebook page.
Russia’s
Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov called U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry
and German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier to press the need
for a ‘deep and transparent constitutional reform involving all
political forces and regions’ that would make Ukraine a federative
non-bloc state.
Mr. Lavrov said Moscow was ready to
take part in four-party talks over the crisis with Ukraine, the European
Union (EU) and the U.S. proposed by Mr. Kerry. However, he said
protesters from Ukraine’s eastern regions should also take part in the
talks and their agenda should include a constitutional reform in
Ukraine.
“No multilateral talks will be effective if
they ignore the legitimate interests of Ukraine’s south and east and
their indignation over the way Kiev has been treating them,” Mr. Lavrov
told a press conference in Moscow on Tuesday.
The
Russian Minister angrily rejected U.S. claims that the protests in
Ukraine’s eastern regions were ‘a carefully orchestrated campaign with
Russian support.’
To say this means ‘laying their own
blame at our door,’ Mr. Lavrov retorted, recalling that the U.S. had
spent billions of dollars financing pro-Western protests in Kiev, which
led to the fall of President Viktor Yanukovych in February.
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