By Ralph
Ellis, Laura Smith-Spark and Gul Tuysuz, CNN
April 27, 2014 -- Updated 0122 GMT (0922 HKT)
Quoting a
Russian Defense Ministry source, RIA Novosti said satellite photos showed the
force forming around the city that has become a friction point between the Ukraine
military and pro-Russian militants.
The Defense
Ministry source said the number of Ukraine troops put the pro-Russian
militants at a disadvantage because the latter are "armed only with small
amount of pistols and shotguns." Many eastern Ukraine
residents have Russian roots and sympathize with Moscow .
The source
said the photos showed about 160 tanks, 230 infantry combat vehicles and
armored personnel carriers, mine throwers and multiple-launch rocket systems.
Russian
President Vladimir Putin has repeatedly criticized Kiev 's use of force against Ukrainian
civilians.
Developments
in Ukraine
have come at a rapid pace in recent days:
-- Russia , which
already had 40,000 troops on its side of the border, started new military
drills a few days ago after Ukrainian forces said they killed five pro-Russian
militants. Ukraine launched
the second stage of an "anti-terrorist operation" against militants
in Slavyansk .
-- On
Friday, a team of European and Ukrainian military observers were seized Friday
by pro-Russian separatists in Slavyansk .
-- Russian
military aircraft "crossed and violated" Ukrainian airspace seven
times overnight, Ukrainian Prime Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk told reporters in
Rome on Saturday. The Russian Defense Ministry denied the accusation, according
to the state news agency Itar-Tass.
--
Yatsenyuk met with Pope Francis while in Rome
on Saturday. The meeting has been seen as a sigh of support from the Vatican for his
government.
-- G7
leaders said they would impose new sanctions on Russia over its role in the crisis.
The
Ukrainian Prime Minister urged Russia
to pull back its security forces and not to support pro-Russian militants in
eastern and southern Ukraine .
"We urge Russia
to leave us alone," he said in televised remarks.
Inspectors
seized in Slavyansk
On
Saturday, the fate of the military inspectors preoccupied world leaders.
The
inspectors from the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe were
detained Friday as they entered Slavyansk , along
with five Ukrainian military representatives and the driver of their bus, Ukraine 's
Interior Ministry said.
The
self-declared mayor of Slavyansk ,
Vyacheslav Ponomarev, told reporters that one of the "prisoners" has
diabetes, but he has the medicine he needs and will be given his own quarters
overnight.
Separatist
leader Denis Pushilin, self-declared chairman of the so-called "Donetsk People's
Republic," told CNN he doesn't believe they are from the OSCE, but that
some are NATO spies.
The German
Foreign Office said it had set up an emergency task force to find out what has
happened to the team members, four of whom are German. The others are from Denmark , Poland ,
Bulgaria and the Czech Republic ,
Russian state media said.
The OSCE
mission in Ukraine is tasked
with helping to implement an international agreement signed nine days ago in Switzerland ,
which called for illegal militia groups to disarm and leave occupied buildings,
among other provisions.
In a phone
call with U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey
Lavrov asked the United States
to use its influence to secure the release of pro-Russian leaders being held in
Ukraine .
Kerry urged
Russia to support efforts of
the OSCE and the government of Ukraine
to liberate the inspectors and their Ukrainian guides, according to a senior
State Department official.
Targeted
sanctions
Against the
backdrop of increasing volatility in Ukraine ,
leaders of the G7 industrialized nations on Friday announced they would
"move swiftly to impose additional sanctions on Russia "
over its actions in Ukraine .
The
statement from the group -- which includes Canada ,
France , Germany , Italy ,
Japan , the United Kingdom and the United States -- came hours after U.S. President
Barack Obama threatened Russia
with new sanctions.
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