Tensions rise in Ukraine's pro-Russian Crimea amid secession fears
February 26, 2014 -- Updated 1518 GMT (2318 HKT)
As the mood soured among the thousands rallying in front of the Crimean parliament building, some scuffles broke out.
One group waved Ukrainian
flags and shouted "Crimea is not Russia," while the other held Russian
flags aloft and shouted "Crimea is Russia," images broadcast by Crimean
TV channel ATR showed. As the crowd became more agitated, a line of
police moved in to divide the groups.
and resist provocations.
The demonstrations signal
the broad divide between those who support what is going on in Kiev,
where the new government is leaning toward the West, and those who back
Russia's continued influence in Crimea and across Ukraine.
Russia's foreign minister has vowed not to intervene militarily in Ukraine.
But with tensions in the
region high, Russian President Vladimir Putin ordered surprise military
exercises Wednesday, state media reported.
The exercises are "to
check combat readiness of armed forces in western and central military
districts as well as several branches of the armed forces," Russian
Defense Minister Sergey Shoigu was quoted as saying.
Shoigu did not mention
Ukraine, which lies to Russia's west, but the timing of the move has
prompted speculation about the motivation.
Ukraine's Ministry of Defense declined to comment on the exercises since they are on Russian territory.
Russia held at least six snap combat readiness checks of its armed forces last year, the state-run RIA Novosti news agency said.
'Rumors' fuel fears of split
Concerns were heightened
in the Crimea region when the Crimean parliament convened a previously
unscheduled session Wednesday, amid local media reports that secession
might be on the agenda.
But the parliament
speaker, Volodimir Konstantinov, denied there were plans to discuss
"radical issues" such as the separation of Russia-oriented Crimea from
Ukraine.
In a statement on the
parliament website, he dismissed the local media reports as "rumors,"
saying they were "a provocation aimed at discrediting and
de-legitimizing the Crimean parliament."
He also urged the Crimean people to remain calm and not be provoked, the statement said.
In the nearby port city
of Sevastopol, where about 60% of the population is Russian and Moscow
has a key naval base, residents told CNN they were angry that President
Viktor Yanukovych has been forced out and fear that they will be
oppressed by the country's new leaders.
Small pro-Russian protests were taking place in the Black Sea city Wednesday.
A CNN team in the area encountered more than one pro-Russian militia checkpoint on the road from Sevastopol to Simferopol.
Yanukovych's base of
support is in eastern and southern Ukraine, where Russian culture and
language predominate. In that region, most people are suspicious of the
Europe-leaning views of their counterparts in western Ukraine, who were
at the heart of the anti-government protests that filled central Kiev.
Many are struggling to
get to grips with the rapid political upheaval that has unfolded in
Ukraine in recent days, after months of protests and last week's bloody
clashes between protesters and security forces.
Russia's Foreign
Ministry has accused Ukraine's lawmakers of discriminating against
ethnic Russians by excluding them from the reform process.
Talks on new government
The tensions come as
Ukraine's lawmakers scramble to put together a new unity government amid
continued instability after Yanukovych's ouster.
Vasil Gatsko, of the
Ukrainian Democratic Alliance for Reforms (UDAR) party, said the three
main opposition parties and smaller parties would meet Wednesday to
discuss proposed members of the new government.
Once the parties agree,
they will take a list of proposed new government members to Kiev's
Independence Square, or Maidan -- which has been at the heart of the
protest movement -- for approval from the crowds gathered there.
Then the newly formed
government will be officially voted in in Ukraine's parliament Thursday
morning, Gatsko said. The interim authorities had initially hoped to
announce a new government Tuesday.
The lawmakers face the
challenge of forming a body that genuinely represents of all the main
political parties, despite their widely divergent views, and includes
technical experts and some of the people's heroes from the protests in
Independence Square.
Presidential and local elections are due to be held on May 25.
One candidate has
already been announced. Opposition leader and former heavyweight boxing
champion Vitali Klitschko, of the UDAR party, will run for the
presidency, his press secretary Oksana Zinovyeva said.
Elite riot police disbanded
Earlier Wednesday,
acting Interior Minister Arsen Avakov announced that a riot police force
used against anti-government protesters in Ukraine had been disbanded.
Demonstrators accused
the elite Berkut force, deployed by the government of Yanukovych to
quell recent protests, of using excessive force.
Avakov said on his Facebook page that he'd signed the order disbanding the force Tuesday.
But the new, pro-Russian
mayor of Sevastopol said Tuesday night at a rally in the city that he
had secured funding to keep paying Berkut riot police there even after
the force was disbanded.
The mayor, Alexej
Chaliy, was elected in an unofficial local vote, but the interim
authorities in Kiev have said he is not a legitimate leader.
Last week, the bloody
street clashes between demonstrators and security forces left more than
80 dead, the deadliest violence in the country since it gained
independence when the Soviet Union collapsed 22 years ago.
Russia, which backed
Yanukovych, contends that the President was driven out by an "armed
mutiny" of extremists and terrorists. A warrant has been issued for his
arrest, but his whereabouts remain unknown.
Diplomatic moves
While Yanukovych is on the run, the diplomatic wheels have been set in motion within the international community.
One key concern is Ukraine's perilous financial position.
Interim Finance Minister
Yury Kolobov proposed Monday that an international donor conference be
held within two weeks. Ukraine, he said, will need $35 billion in
foreign assistance by the end of 2015.
Russia had offered
Ukraine a $15 billion loan and cut in natural gas prices in November,
but that deal seems unlikely to remain on the table if Ukraine turns
toward Europe.
UK Foreign Secretary
William Hague tweeted Wednesday: "Will discuss international financial
support for #Ukraine at the IMF in Washington DC today."
Ukrainian state news agency Ukrinform said the country has slashed its imports of natural gas from Russia in recent days.
Speaking in Washington
on Tuesday, U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry said officials were
"deeply engaged in trying to help this extraordinary transition that is
taking place in Ukraine."
In a joint news
conference with British Foreign Secretary William Hague, Kerry said that
Ukraine's alliances should not necessarily determine what happens to
its people -- and that it was not a "zero sum" game.
"It is not a Russia or
the United States or other choices," he said. "This is about people of
Ukraine and Ukrainians making their choice about their future. And we
want to work with Russia, with other countries, with everybody available
to make sure this is peaceful from this day forward."
Yanukovych's decision to
scrap a European Union trade deal in favor of one with Russia prompted
the protests, which began in November.
CNN's Phil Black reported from Kiev,
Frederik Pleitgen reported from Sevastopol and Laura Smith-Spark wrote
and reported in London. CNN's Ingrid Formanek and journalist Azad
Safanov in Kiev contributed to this report, as did CNN's Alla Eshchenko
in Moscow.
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