Fresh fighting broke out in central Kiev on Thursday, shattering a truce declared by Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovich, as the Russian-backed leader met European ministers demanding he compromise with pro-EU opponents.
A Reuters photographer saw the bodies of 21 dead civilians in Independence Square, a few hundred metres from where the president met the EU delegation, after protesters who have occupied the area for almost three months hurled petrol bombs and paving stones to drive riot police from the plaza.
“Berkut” riot policemen, shown on television, fired bursts from automatic rifles on the run as they covered retreating colleagues fleeing past a nearby arts centre. In other video, an opposition militant in a helmet fired from behind a tree.
Other protesters used police riot shields for cover, while some fell wounded as the protest camp became a killing zone.
The foreign ministers of Germany, France and Poland were to report back in Brussels later in the day to EU colleagues, who will decide on possible targeted sanctions against those deemed responsible for the worst bloodshed in Ukraine’s 22 years of independence since the collapse of the Soviet Union.
Russia criticised the European and US measures, calling them “blackmail” that would only make matters worse. It also stepped up pressure on Yanukovich to crack down and restore order if he wanted more, desperately needed, loans – the Russian prime minister said it would not hand over cash to a leadership that let opponents walk over it “like a doormat”.
A Ukrainian presidential statement said dozens of police were wounded or killed during an opposition offensive hours after Yanukovich and opposition leaders had agreed on a truce. Witnesses said they saw snipers firing during the clashes. The Health Ministry said two police were among Thursday’s dead.
That raised the total death toll since Tuesday to at least 51, including at least 12 police. Local media said more than 30 protesters were killed in Thursday’s flare-up.
The country is the object of a geopolitical tug-of-war between Moscow – which sees it as a market and a cultural ally and also fears protests spreading to Russia – and the West, which says Ukrainians should be free to choose economic rapprochement with the EU.
The renewed fighting, which subsided after about an hour, heightened concern voiced by neighbouring Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk that Ukraine could descend into civil war or split between the pro-European west and Russian-speaking east.
The EU ministers’ meeting with Yanukovich began an hour late for security reasons. They expected to present him with a mixture of sanctions and enticements to make a deal with his opponents that could end the bloodshed.
A statement from Yanukovich’s office said: “They (the protesters) are working in organised groups. They are using firearms, including sniper rifles. They are shooting to kill.”
Amid reports that some of Yanukovich’s political allies were distancing themselves from him, opposition leader Vitaly Klitschko urged lawmakers to convene in parliament and demanded Yanukovich call an immediate presidential election. “Today is a crucial day,” Klitschko said. “The authorities are resorting to bloody provocations in full view of the world.”
Some legislators began gathering at parliament, near the main square, as German Chancellor Angela Merkel urged Yanukovich to accept an offer of EU mediation in the crisis.
POLICE OFFICERS CAPTURED
Activists who recaptured the square, known as Maidan or “Euro-Maidan” to the opposition, appeared to lead away several uniformed officers. Dozens of wounded protesters were being given makeshift first-aid treatment in the lobby of the Ukraine Hotel, where many foreign correspondents are staying.
Reporters said there were bullet holes in the walls and windows of the hotel overlooking the square. Both sides have accused the other of using live ammunition.
“Black smoke, detonations and gunfire around presidential palace … Officials panicky,” tweeted Polish minister Radoslaw Sikorski to explain the delay in the meeting at Yanukovich’s office, a few hundred metres from the square.
Pro-EU activists have been keeping vigil there since the president turned his back on a trade pact with the bloc in November and accepted financial aid from Moscow.
Russia, which has been holding back a new loan instalment until it sees stability in Kiev, has condemned EU and US support of the opposition demands that Yanukovich, elected in 2010, should share power and hold new elections.
In an apparent criticism of Yanukovich’s handling of the crisis, Russian Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev said on Thursday that Moscow could only cooperate fully with Ukraine when its leadership was in “good shape”, Interfax news agency said.
The crisis in the sprawling country of 46 million with an ailing economy and endemic corruption has mounted since Yanukovich, under pressure from the Kremlin, took a $15-billion (9 billion pounds) Russian bailout instead of a wide-ranging trade and cooperation deal with the EU.
The United States stepped up pressure on Wednesday by imposing travel bans on 20 senior Ukrainian officials, and EU foreign ministers are due to meet in Brussels later on Thursday to consider similar measures.
A statement on Yanukovich’s website announced an accord late on Wednesday with opposition leaders for “the start to negotiations with the aim of ending bloodshed, and stabilising the situation in the state in the interest of social peace”.
Responding cautiously, US President Barack Obama deemed the truce a “welcome step forward”, but said he would monitor the situation closely to “ensure that actions mirror words”.
“Our approach in the United States is not to see these as some Cold War chessboard in which we’re in competition with Russia,” Obama said after a North American summit in Mexico.
At Russia’s Winter Olympics in Sochi, some members of Ukraine’s team have decided to leave because of the violence at home, the International Olympic Committee said on Thursday.
COMBATIVE MOOD
In Kiev, protesters were in truculent mood despite the overnight lull. Columns of men bearing clubs and chanting patriotic songs headed to Independence Square at 8:30 a.m. (0630 GMT).
“What truce? There is no truce! It is simply war ahead of us! They are provoking us. They throw grenades at us. Burn our homes. We have been here for three months, and during that time nothing burned,” said 23-year-old Petro Maksimchuk.
“These are not people. They are killers. Sanctions will not help. They all should be sent into isolation in Siberia.”
Serhiy, a 55-year-old from the western city of Lviv who declined to give his surname, added: “It is bad that Ukraine is already broken into two parts. In the West, the police and army are with us, but in the east, they are against us.
“It is the ‘Yanukovichers’ who are dividing us.”
In Lviv, a bastion of Ukrainian nationalism since Soviet times, the regional assembly declared autonomy from Yanukovich and his administration, which many west Ukrainians see as much closer to Moscow and to Ukraine’s Russian-speaking east.
Yanukovich, who replaced the head of the armed forces, had denounced the bloodshed in central Kiev as an attempted coup. His security service said it had launched a nationwide “anti-terrorist operation” after arms and ammunition dumps were looted.
The EU ministers are expected to consider a series of possible steps including asset freezes and travel bans, even though diplomats doubt their effectiveness.
Jumping out ahead of its EU allies, Washington imposed U.S. visa bans on 20 government officials it considered “responsible for ordering human rights abuses related to political oppression”, a State Department official said.
“These individuals represent the full chain of command we consider responsible for ordering the security forces to move against (the protesters),” the official said.
EU officials said Yanukovich himself would be excluded from any such measures in order to keep channels of dialogue open.
Diplomats said the threat of sanctions could also target assets held in the West by Ukrainian business oligarchs who have either backed Yanukovich or are sitting on the fence.
Russian President Vladimir Putin, who has met Yanukovich six times since the crisis began, has kept quiet on the flare-up. But Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov blamed the West for inciting opposition radicals and called the threat of sanctions blackmail.
Ukraine’s hryvnia currency, flirting with its lowest levels since the global financial crisis five years ago, weakened again on Thursday. Ukraine’s state debt insurance costs rose to their highest since December 2009.
Possibly due to the risk of sanctions, three of Ukraine’s richest magnates have stepped up pressure on Yanukovich to hold back from using force.
“There are no circumstances which justify the use of force toward the peaceful population,” steel and coal magnate Rinat Akhmetov, who bankrolled Yanukovich’s 2010 election campaign said in a statement late on .
Source: Bd news24