Tensions rise in Crimea amid report of Russian ultimatum
Russia has issued an ultimatum to Ukrainian forces in Crimea to clear out by 5 a.m. Tuesday or face a "military storm," according to Russian state-run news agency Interfax, which cited a Ukrainian Defense Ministry source.
Ukrainian officials say Aleksandr
Vitko, the Russian commander of the Black Sea Fleet, went aboard a blocked
Ukrainian warship in Sevastopol Harbor on Monday and issued the threat.
"Swear allegiance to the new
Crimean authorities, or surrender, or face an attack," he said, according to
Vladislav Seleznev, a Ukrainian Defense Ministry spokesman in Crimea who spoke
to CNN. He said the Russian commander did not mention an ultimatum deadline.
Moscow has defended its
parliament's approval of President Vladimir Putin's use of military force to
protect its citizens in the Crimean Peninsula, an autonomous region of eastern
Ukraine with strong loyalty to Russia.
"I repeat: This is a matter of
defending our citizens and our compatriots, of defending the most important
human right -- the right to life," Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said
at a U.N. human rights meeting in Geneva, Switzerland.
But Ukraine's ambassador to the
U.N. says Russia's reasoning for the invasion is fake.
"There is no evidence that the
Russian ethnic population or Russian-speaking population is under threat,"
Ambassador Yuri Sergeyev told CNN.
The Russian parliament, or Duma,
is also considering a law that would allow for the annexation of Crimea,
according to the parliament's website.
"Now they are trying to create
new legal basis to prove annexation of the territory they're now occupying,"
Sergeyev said.
A senior U.S. administration
official told CNN that Russian forces "have complete operational control of the
Crimean Peninsula." The official said the U.S. estimates there are 6,000 Russian
ground and naval forces in the region.
"There is no question that they
are in an occupation position -- flying in reinforcements and settling in,"
another senior administration official said.
In Kiev, interim Prime Minister
Arseniy Yatsenyuk, who has accused Moscow of declaring war, vowed that his
West-leaning government would not give up the region.
"Nobody will give Crimea away.
... There are no grounds for the use of force against civilians and Ukrainians,
and for the entry of the Russian military contingent," he said. "Russia never
had any grounds and never will."
Ukraine's shaky new government
has mobilized troops and called up military reservists.
Camouflaged and
unidentified
Former Ukrainian Prime Minister
Yulia Tymoshenko, released from jail last week, asked the international
community for help.
"I am asking all the world,
personally every world leader, to use all the possibilities in order to avoid
Ukraine losing Crimea," she told CNN's Christiane Amanpour in an interview.
Ukrainian border guards on
Monday reported a buildup of armored vehicles on the Russian side of a narrow
sea channel dividing Russia and Crimea, Reuters reported, citing a border guard
spokesman.
He said that Russian ships had
been moving in and around the city of Sevastopol, where the Russian Black Sea
Fleet has a base, and Russian forces had blocked mobile telephone service in
some areas. The buildup of Russian armor was near a ferry port on the Russian
side of the Kerch Channel, opposite the Ukrainian city of Kerch.
Meanwhile, the Ukrainian State
Border Security Service said there had been several attacks on border posts in
eastern Crimea just along the border with Russia.
Also on Sunday night,
unidentified armed men tried to enter the arms depot in Belbek military base
near Sevastopol, said Seleznev, the Ukrainian Defense Ministry spokesman.
Ukrainian forces shot into the air to warn them off, but the unidentified men
used sound grenades and a Ukrainian commander was wounded as a result, Seleznev
told CNN.
The attackers gained access to
the base, but Ukrainian troops retain control of the weapons depot and
administration building, Seleznev added.
Men dressed in both civilian and
camouflage gear with red armbands have patrolled the streets of the regional
capital, Simferopol. The area has seen several pro-Russia demonstrations with
crowds waving Russian flags and shouting "Thank you, Putin."
Navy defector seeks
allies
Ten Ukrainian military and naval
bases in Crimea are currently blocked by armed men, the newly appointed naval
commander of Ukraine, Rear Admiral Serhei Gayduk, told a Ukrainian TV
station.
His predecessor, Denis
Berezovsky, who on Sunday said he would not submit to orders from Kiev and
defected, was said to have entered the Ukrainian naval base in Crimea under the
protection of a group of Cossacks and tried to convince other Ukrainian officers
to defect. However, Gayduk was at the base and urged officers to maintain their
allegiance to Ukraine, the Defense Ministry's Seleznev told CNN. Troops
responded by singing the Ukrainian national anthem.
These scenes come after Putin
secured permission from his parliament Saturday to use military force to protect
Russian citizens in Ukraine and told U.S. President Barack Obama he had the
right to defend Russian interests and nationals, spurning Western pleas not to
intervene.
Worried
West
The tensions have worried the
West, and Russia's G8 partners have condemned Moscow's military buildup in
Crimea. The world's seven major industrialized powers also suspended
preparations for the G8 summit in Sochi, Russia, in June.
Their finance ministers
announced some economic support for cash-strapped Ukraine.
"We are also committed to
mobilize rapid technical assistance to support Ukraine in addressing its
macroeconomic, regulatory, and anti-corruption challenges," G7 finance ministers
said in a written statement.
U.S. Secretary of State John
Kerry, due in Kiev Tuesday, said several foreign powers are looking at economic
consequences if Russia does not withdraw its forces.
"It is now of the utmost
importance to install calm and de-escalate tensions immediately through
dialogue," U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon told reporters.
Scheduled to meet Lavrov later
Monday, he urged "that the Russian Federation refrain from any acts and rhetoric
that can further escalate the situation and instead engage constructively and
through peaceful means with Ukraine."
German Chancellor Angela
Merkel's office said Putin had accepted a proposal to establish a "fact-finding
mission" to Ukraine, possibly under the leadership of the Organization for
Security and Co-operation in Europe, and to start a political dialogue.
East vs.
West
Ukraine, a nation of 45 million
people sandwiched between Europe and Russia's southwestern border, has been in
chaos since Yanukovych was ousted on February 22 after bloody street protests
that left dozens dead and hundreds wounded.
Anti-government demonstrations
started in late November, when Yanukovych spurned a deal with the EU, favoring
closer ties with Moscow instead.
Ukraine has faced a deepening
split, with those in the west generally supporting the interim government and
its European Union tilt, while many in the east prefer a Ukraine where Russia
casts a long shadow.
Nowhere is that feeling more
intense than in Crimea, the last big bastion of opposition to the new political
leadership. Ukraine suspects Russia of fomenting tension in the autonomous
region that might escalate into a bid for separation by its Russian
majority.
Ukrainian leaders and
commentators have compared events in Crimea to what happened in Georgia in 2008.
Then, cross-border tensions with Russia exploded into a five-day conflict that
saw Russian tanks and troops pour into the breakaway territories of South
Ossetia and Abkhazia, as well as Georgian cities. Russia and Georgia each blamed
the other for starting the conflict.
The crisis has hit Russian stock
markets, with Moscow's main MICEX index opening about 8% lower Monday. The
central bank hiked interest rates to 7% from 5.5%.
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