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Uniformed men occupy Donetsk police HQ | ASHARQ AL-AWSAT English Archive 2005 -2017
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Pro-Russian protesters sit at barricades at the police headquarters in Slaviansk on April 12, 2014. (REUTERS/Gleb Garanich)


Pro-Russian protesters sit at barricades at the police headquarters in Slaviansk on April 12, 2014. (REUTERS/Gleb Garanich)

Pro-Russian protesters sit at barricades at the police headquarters in Slaviansk on April 12, 2014. (REUTERS/Gleb Garanich)

Donetsk, AP—Men in the uniforms of Ukraine’s now-defunct riot police on Saturday occupied police headquarters in Donetsk, the eastern city that is one of the flashpoints of a wave of pro-Russia protests, hours after armed men seized local police headquarters in Slovyansk, a city about 55 miles (90 kilometers) away.

The unrest in Donetsk and Slovyansk were the latest shows of spiraling anger in eastern Ukraine, which has a large Russian-speaking population and was also the support base for Viktor Yanukovych, the Ukrainian president who was ousted in February after months of protests in the capital, Kiev. Ethnic Russians in Ukraine’s east widely allege that the authorities who took over after Yanukovych’s fall will suppress them.

In Slovyansk, the mayor said the men who seized the police station were demanding a referendum on autonomy and possible annexation by Russia. Protesters in other eastern cities have made similar demands after a referendum in Crimea last month in which voters opted to split off from Ukraine, leading to annexation by Russia.

A regional news website said another police station had been seized in the town of Krasniy Liman, a city near Slovyansk, but that report could not immediately be confirmed.

Witnesses said the men who entered the police building in Donetsk were wearing the uniforms of the Berkut, the feared riot police squad that was disbanded in February after Yanukovych’s ouster. Berkut officers’ violent dispersal of a demonstration in Kiev in November set off vast protests in the capital that culminated in bloodshed in February when more than 100 people died in sniper fire; the acting government says the snipers were police.

It was not immediately clear if the men who occupied the Donetsk police building had made any demands.

In Slovyansk, about 20 men in balaclavas armed with automatic rifles and pistols were guarding the entrance to the police station in the city of about 120,000 people, and another 20 were believed to be inside. They wore St. George’s ribbons, which have become a symbol of pro-Russian protesters in eastern Ukraine. The ribbons were originally associated with the Soviet Union’s victory in World War II.

A masked guard in Slovyansk, who gave his name only as Sergei, told The Associated Press they have “only one demand: a referendum and joining Russia.”

The man said they seized the building because they wanted to protect it from radical nationalists from western Ukraine and “the junta who seized power in Kiev.”

“We don’t want to be slaves of America and the West,” he said. “We want to live with Russia.”

The Interior Ministry said in a statement that the attackers’ goal was to seize arms from the police station. They said there were about 40 automatic rifles and 400 pistols as well as ammunition inside.

A video from the scene showed one man carrying a sniper rifle. An AP reporter saw another man loading the magazine of a pistol at the police station.

Interior Minister Arsen Avakov pledged a “very tough response” to the seizure while local media reported special forces dispatched to the area.

Local sympathizers brought tires to the police station to start building barricades. Gunshots rang out in the background in a video from the scene after an armed man shouted to a cameraman to stop recording. No casualties were immediately reported.
An Associated Press crew saw about 10 men wearing camouflage and carrying automatic rifles at the entrance to the town late Saturday afternoon. The men were building a barricade with tires.

The Kiev authorities and the United States have accused Russia of fomenting the unrest in the east and seeking to use it as a pretext for sending in troops. Russia has reportedly massed forces in areas near the Ukrainian border.

But Mayor Nelya Shtepa told the AP that she held talks with the protesters and said they were local residents, not Russians.
“They told me: ‘We don’t have anything against you,’ ” she said, adding that the men said they “want to be heard, want a dialogue with authorities in Kiev.”

Protesters, who have held the administration building in Donetsk since Sunday, initially called for a referendum on secession but later reduced the demand to a vote on autonomy within Ukraine with the possibility of holding another later on whether to join Russia.

Russia’s Foreign Ministry on Friday warned the Ukrainian government against using force against protesters, saying that such action would derail the talks on settling the crisis between the United States, the European Union, Russia and Ukraine set for next week, as well as any other diplomatic efforts.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov pressed the complaint in a telephone call with his Ukrainian counterpart, Andriy Deschytsia, on Saturday.

Lavrov told Deschytsia of “the unacceptability of the constant threats from Kiev to storm buildings held by protesters,” according to a Foreign Ministry statement.