By Greg
Botelho, Victoria Butenko and Nick Paton Walsh, CNN
May 3, 2014 -- Updated 2314 GMT (0714 HKT)
On the
other, there was the pro-Russian separatist leader in Luhansk who announced the
formation of an army to march on Kiev .
These and
other statements suggest Ukraine 's
future will feature yet more unrest, more fighting and more likelihood that it
will spawn a full-scale civil war and, perhaps, an international one.
Saturday
actually featured a rare bright spot in the volatility: the release of seven
international observers and five Ukrainians from the defense ministry who'd
been seized together.
Prime
Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk said this development "should signal to
everyone that we need peace and reconciliation."
He added:
"This is the only way ... to save Ukraine and ... make it a
flourishing European state.
Yet there
appears little indication that anything has changed overall in Ukraine --
particularly in its east and, increasingly, its south -- to change the
perception that the nation is in crisis.
Interior
Minister Arsen Avakov said the "active phase" of an operation
involving "special units ... instructed to stop the provocation" was
in its second day Saturday and centered in Kramatorsk , where people were urged to stay
indoors.
A CNN team
on the outskirts of the city, which is some 16 kilometers (10 miles) south of Slavyansk , saw troop
carriers moving toward the city center. Amateur video posted online -- which
CNN could not confirm the authenticity of -- showed burnt out buses, plumes of
smoke and residents calmly observing it all.
In a phone
call Saturday with U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry, Foreign Minister Sergey
Lavrov said, "(The) punitive operation in the southeastern Ukraine plunges
the country into fratricidal conflict."
This unrest
raises the prospect of Russia
becoming even more involved, whether that involves taking over all or parts of
the region peacefully as it did with Crimea or
as part of a full-scale military conflict.
Dmitry
Peskov, Russian President Vladimir Putin's spokesman, told CNN that his
nation's government had received thousands of calls in the past 24 hours from
people in southeastern Ukraine .
The callers described the situation as "horrendous" and pleaded for Russia 's
involvement.
"Most
of the people literally demand active help from Russia ," Peskov said.
Separatist
leader: We won't wait 'until we are encircled and burned'
If Moscow does get involved militarily, they won't have to go
far: NATO has estimated up to 40,000 Russian troops are now near the border
with Ukraine , a fact that
has made not just Ukraine
but other neighboring nations wary of invasion.
Earlier
this week, acting Ukrainian President Oleksandr Turchynov acknowledged that the
central government has effectively lost control of the country's Donetsk and Luhansk
regions to the pro-Russian separatists.
The
violence has spilled over into cities like Odessa ,
on the Black Sea . Saturday there was calm
relative to the previous day -- when 46 people died in a blaze and clashes, a
spokesperson for the local prosecutor's office told CNN -- with the frustration
palpable on the city streets.
It's in
Luhansk where separatist leader Valeriy Bolotov on Saturday declared a state of
emergency and announced the formation of a "South-East" army for the
entire region.
In a video
statement aired on local stations, Bolotov also introduced a curfew, a ban on
political parties, and his expectation that local law enforcement officials
will take an oath of allegiance to the people of Luhansk.
"In
case of not following this, you will be announced traitors of people of Luhansk
and wartime measures will be taken against you," he announced in the video
statement.
Bolotov
stated that the new armed forces wouldn't just protect the region, it would try
to move forward to take Ukraine 's
capital.
"We
are not going to sit and wait until we are encircled and burned," he said.
Ex-hostage:
Detained because mission 'wasn't coordinated' with locals
Saturday's
release of the Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe observers --
who are from Germany , Denmark , Poland
and the Czech Republic
-- resolved a major diplomatic issue for the West.
The
self-declared mayor of Slavyansk ,
Vyacheslav Ponomarev, confirmed the release, crediting Russian envoy Vladimir
Lukin with helping make it happen. Ponomarev told CNN there had been no
prisoner exchange.
One of the
hostages freed, Col. Turatsky Igor Dmytrovych of Ukraine 's armed forces, said that
no one was injured and everyone got "food, drink and sleep." He also
shed light on their captors' thinking, including their questions of "why
did we come to that region, what was our goal, and which tasks we had to
accomplish."
"We
were told that our delegation was detained as our mission wasn't coordinated
with local population representatives that have their own opinion on the course
of events," Dmytrovych said after arriving in Kiev on Saturday.
This sense
of who controls what -- or, at least, who should control what -- is at the core
of the tensions in Ukraine .
Separatists,
many of them of Russian descent, believe that the government in Kiev is illegitimate
since it formed after what they call the illegal ousting of President Viktor
Yanukovych in February. They have demanded that no one in Kiev should control their territory, saying
that power and responsibility should rest with them or their Russian ally.
Officials
in Kiev have
the opposite view. They accuse Moscow of
meddling, in its support of separatists and more, trying to break up Ukraine and,
perhaps, take over parts or all of it. The government explains their military
and security actions in the east and south are aimed at a common goal: to keep
their Eastern European nation whole and united.
Referring
to his call with Lavrov on Saturday, Kerry said he stressed the United States and allies' desire "for Russia to
withdraw support from the separatists, ... assist in removing people from the
buildings (and begin) to de-escalate the situation."
"If
those supported by Russia
continue to interfere with the (May 25 national) election, regrettably, there
will have to be additional sanctions" against Moscow , said Kerry. "But Foreign
Minister Lavrov and I did talk about how to proceed and perhaps how to find a
way forward here."
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