By Simon
Denyer and Anna Nemtsova, Published: May 2 E-mail the writer
The
Ukrainian army attacked Slovyansk in the east of the country at dawn, provoking
the heaviest military fighting since a pro-Russian uprising began a month ago.
The army took control of the major checkpoints outside the city but was unable
to force its way into the center, and two of its helicopters were shot down.
The biggest
loss of lives came in Odessa .
A pro-Ukrainian rally attended by thousands of soccer fans before a game Friday
night was attacked by pro-Russian separatists. The two sides fought running
battles through the city in the afternoon, throwing stones at each other and erecting
barricades. At least three people were killed.
Friday
evening, a pro-Ukrainian mob attacked a camp where the pro-Russian supporters
had pitched tents, forcing them to flee to a nearby government building, a
witness said. The mob then threw gasoline bombs into the building. Police said
31 people were killed when they choked on smoke or jumped out of windows.
Asked who
had thrown the molotov cocktails, pro-Ukrainian activist Diana Berg said, “Our
people — but now they are helping them to escape the building.”
It amounted
to the deadliest day in the Ukrainian crisis since February, when scores of
people were killed, many by snipers, in protests against then-President Viktor
Yanukovych.
A spokesman
for Russian President Vladimir Putin called the offensive a “criminal” act and
said it had “effectively destroyed the last hope for the implementation of the
Geneva agreements” reached April 17 that were intended to defuse the crisis.
Under the accord, signed by Ukraine ,
Russia , the United States and the European Union,
separatists were supposed to lay down their arms and vacate government
buildings they have occupied across eastern Ukraine .
In Washington , President Obama expressed strong support
Friday for the Ukrainian offensive and said the United
States and Europe “are united in our determination to
impose costs on Russia for
its actions” in destabilizing eastern Ukraine .
At the U.N.
Security Council, Russia and
the United States
again traded accusations and insults. Using Cold War language, Russia ’s ambassador to the United Nations,
Vitaly Churkin, said that if the “criminal misadventures of the Kiev clique are not
stopped, . . . catastrophic consequences cannot be avoided.”
Churkin
charged that “English-speaking foreigners” had been overheard in radio
communications during Ukraine ’s
current “punitive operations” against the separatists.
The United States , France
and Britain
were scathing in their responses.
“A
pyromaniac fireman situation is what we have here,” French U.N. Ambassador
Gérard Araud said. Russia
is “screaming in order to make us forget that this path was set long ago, and
it’s no longer possible to go backwards.”
Assault on
Slovyansk
Ukrainian
troops attacked the rebel stronghold of Slovyansk at dawn, meeting heavy
resistance from pro-Russian separatists. After three or four hours of clashes,
the army had taken control of checkpoints on the main roads leading to the
city, but the center of Slovyansk remained in rebel hands. The fighting subsided
by the afternoon but resumed in the evening.
Two
Ukrainian Mi-24 attack helicopters were shot down and two crew members killed,
while seven soldiers were wounded in the offensive, the government said. One
helicopter pilot was captured by the rebels and transferred to a hospital,
medics told local news media.
The rebels
said three of their fighters and two civilians were killed. But Turchynov said
many “criminals” were killed, wounded or taken prisoner.
Vyacheslav
Ponomarev, who has been appointed mayor of Slovyansk by the insurgents, urged
women, children and senior citizens to remain in their homes but asked men with
guns “to render all possible assistance.”
“We will
defend the city. We will win,” he said in a video message posted on the
Internet.
Stella
Khorosheva, a rebel spokeswoman, posted on her Facebook account: “The situation
is stable on the streets, but there is a high risk of full-scale action. In
short, it’s war.”
The
Ukrainian Security Service said its fighters were facing “highly skilled
foreign military men” in Slovyansk. It said one of the helicopters was shot
down with a surface-to-air missile, which it said undercut Russia ’s claims that the city is
under the control of civilians who bought arms in “hunting stores.”
Swedish
Foreign Minister Carl Bildt agreed. “Ukrainian helicopters shot down in
Slovyansk. Some elderly ladies bought some RPGs or missiles at the local
grocery store, I assume,” he posted on Twitter.
The
European Union said it is watching the developments with growing concern, and
NATO has said it must view Russia
as an adversary in light of apparent efforts to destabilize the region
following its annexation of Crimea in March.
But Western leaders have made it clear they have no intention of engaging Russia militarily over Ukraine .
Putin sends
envoy
Putin on
Thursday sent a special envoy, Vladimir Lukin, to eastern Ukraine to
negotiate with separatists who have taken seven international observers
hostage, spokesman Dmitry Peskov told the Interfax news service. That mission
was “under threat” Friday, the Russian Foreign Ministry said in a statement.
The Foreign
Ministry also said that English-speaking foreigners were seen among the
Ukrainian forces mounting the assault on Slovyansk on Friday, echoing its
previous charges that U.S.
contractors were involved in Ukraine ’s
response to the unrest in the east.
“The United States
and the E.U. are taking on a huge responsibility in cutting of the road to a
peaceful resolution of the crisis,” the Foreign Ministry said.
Nemtsova
reported from Slovyansk , Ukraine . Michael Birnbaum in Moscow and Karen DeYoung and William Branigin in Washington contributed
to this report.
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