Sunday 25 January 2015

Rockets kill 30 in Mariupol at ukraine


  • Rockets kill 30 in Mariupol as rebels launch offensive

    "Until this moment Mariupol had been outside of the fighting, now bodies lie in the streets, says the BBC's David Stern
    Continue reading the main story

    Ukraine crisis

    • Is Russia stoking war?
    • Ukraine's far right
    • Russian 'holy war'
    • West risks promising too much
    A series of rocket attacks has left 30 people dead and many more injured in the city of Mariupol in east Ukraine.
    Ukraine blamed pro-Russia rebels, but the separatists said Ukrainian forces were behind the attacks.
    East Ukraine's main rebel leader claimed he had begun an offensive against Mariupol, but later said he "will not storm the city".
    The Organisation for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) said the rockets came from rebel-held areas.
    But Alexander Zakharchenko, head of the self-proclaimed Donetsk People's Republic, said his forces had not carried out "active operations" near Mariupol until Saturday, Russian news agencies report.
    However, he added that after Kiev blamed the rebels for the attack, he ordered his troops to "neutralise" the positions of Ukrainian troops east of the port city.
    Meanwhile, Ukraine's security service has published what it claims are intercepted audio messages between separatist rebels speaking about the Mariupol attack.
    The incident comes a day after Mr Zakharchenko said he did not want truce talks with Kiev.

    On Saturday he claimed the Mariupol offensive would be "the best possible monument to all our dead".

    The rebel leader made his comments at a memorial ceremony for those killed in an artillery attack on a bus stop in the rebel-held city of Donetsk on Friday.

    Mariupol has a population of 500,000 and is in a highly strategic position, sitting between rebel-held eastern areas and Crimea, which was annexed by Russia last March. The city saw heavy fighting in August.

    Unverified video footage on Saturday indicated that a number of cars, houses and apartment buildings had been struck and were in flames.

    The BBC's David Stern says the attack appeared to come from a multiple-rocket launcher, which fires a large number of missiles over a spread-out area.
    Mayor killed
    Also on Friday, rebel military spokesman Eduard Basurin said 24 rebels had been killed and 30 wounded in recent fighting. He called it "the heaviest losses in our ranks" in a 24-hour period.

    In another development, the rebel mayor of Pervomaysk, west of Luhansk, has been killed, reports say.

    The body of Yevhen Ischchenko was found in a car. Three other men were apparently killed along with him. The local rebel leadership blamed Ukrainian agents, but other sources said it was the result of infighting.

    Since April, more than 5,000 people have died in fighting in the east.

    The rebels currently control a large swathe of the Donetsk and Luhansk regions. More than a million people have been displaced.

    A ceasefire was agreed in Minsk in September but never fully took hold.
     
  •  Some 5.2 million people live in conflict-affected areas and 1.4 million are considered "highly vulnerable and in need of assistance"
  • More than a million people have fled their homes with 633,523 living as displaced persons within Ukraine and 593,622 living outside Ukraine, mostly in Russia
  • More than 5,000 people have been killed in the fighting and more than 10,300 injured

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