People wait
to be rescued from the trade union building in
|
Trade union
building set alight after day of street battles in Black
Sea resort city
Howard Amos in Odessa and Harriet Salem
in Slavyansk
The
Guardian, Friday 2 May 2014 / http://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/may/02/ukraine-dead-odessa-building-fire
More than
30 people were killed in violent and chaotic clashes in the southern Ukrainian
city of Odessa on Friday as pro-Ukraine
activists stormed a building defended by protesters opposed to the current
government in Kiev and in favour of closer ties
with Russia .
The
violence continued on Saturday as Ukraine
said its forces had attacked pro-Russian separatists in the industrial east of
the country at dawn near the town of Kramatorsk .
Interior
minister Arsen Avakov said Ukrainian forces had seized control of a television
tower in Kramatorsk , near the rebel stronghold
of Slavyansk
where there was heavy fighting on Friday. "We are not stopping,"
Avakov wrote on his Facebook page, but gave no information on casualties.
Bodies lay
in pools of blood outside the main entrance as explosions from improvised
grenades and molotov cocktails filled the air. Black smoke from the building
and a burning pro-Russia protest camp wreathed the nearby square.
A
pro-Russia activist aims a pistol at supporters of the Kiev
government during clashes in the streets of Odessa . Photograph: Sergey Gumenyuk/Reuters
Pro-Russia
fighters mounted a last-ditch defence of the burning building, throwing masonry
and petrol bombs from the roof on to the crowd below
Medics at
the scene said the pro-Russia fighters were also shooting from the roof. At
least five bodies with bullet wounds lay on the ground covered by Ukraine flags
as fire engines and ambulances arrived at the scene.
Some people
fell from the burning building as they hung on to windowsills in an attempt to
avoid the fire that had taken hold inside. Pro-Ukraine protesters made
desperate efforts to reach people with ropes and improvised scaffolding.
"At
first we broke through the side, and then we came through the main
entrance," said one pro-Ukrainian fighter, 20, who said he was a member of
the extreme nationalist group Right Sector.
A protester
walks past a burning pro-Russia tent camp near the trade union building in Odessa . Photograph:
Yevgeny Volokin/Reuters
"They
had guns and they were shooting … Some people jumped from the roof, they died
obviously," he said.
Riot police
arrived on the scene as hand-to-hand fighting was already under way inside, but
did not enter the building and stood formed up in ranks outside.
Within two
hours of the assault beginning, the resistance from pro-Russia activists inside
the building seemed to have been quelled. Several fire crews were spraying the
smouldering building with water and ambulances lined the streets outside.
Bloody and
dazed pro-Russia protesters were eventually escorted from the building. Many
were handed over to police, and loaded on to police vans. Some were assaulted
by the crowd.
A wounded
man is treated after clashes in Odessa .
Photograph: Sergey Gumenyuk/EPA
"The
aim is to completely clear Odessa
[of pro-Russians]," said Dmitry Rogovsky, another activist from Right
Sector whose hand had been injured during the fighting. "They are all paid
Russian separatists."
The seizure
of the trade union building was the violent culmination of a day of street
battles in this Black Sea resort city.
The clashes
reportedly began after protesters gathering for a rally in support of a unified
Ukraine
were attacked by pro-Russia activists armed with clubs and air pistols.
But the
confrontation quickly escalated into a series of skirmishes as the two sides
played a deadly cat and mouse game in the centre of the city.
Police
largely stood aside as the two sides hurled molotov cocktails, cobblestones and
bricks at each other. Girls as young as fourteen were smashing cobblestones to
break them up into missiles of a manageable size.
Combatants
on both sides were armed with body armour, helmets and shields and carried
baseball bats, chains, metal bars and air pistols.
For two and
a half hours the police were absent, said Olga Gold, a teacher watching the
unrest. "The authorities have been absolutely indifferent," she said.
Dozens of
buildings and cars were damaged during the violence. Most of the cafes and bars
in central Odessa ,
a popular holiday spot, were closed by early evening.
Meanwhile
in the east of the country on Friday Ukrainian military forces mounted their fiercest
attempt yet to retake Slavyansk – the town at the centre of the pro-Russia
insurrection – obliterating checkpoints and losing two helicopters in an
assault that has tilted the country closer to outright conflict.
At least
two Ukrainian crewmen died when the Mi-24 helicopters were brought down by
sophisticated missiles, and Stella Khorosheva, a spokeswoman for the
insurgents, said three fighters and two civilians were killed in the clashes.
The claims
could not be verified but the escalation resulted in the deadliest day in Ukraine since a
dozen towns and cities fell to pro-Russia gunmen last month.
On Friday
night, Slavyansk
was calm but tense as pro-Russia gunmen regrouped in the rain.
Barack
Obama and Angela Merkel hold a joint news conference in the Rose Garden.
Photograph: Alex Wong/Getty
The sudden
escalation dominated exchanges between Barack Obama and Angela Merkel in Washington . The US and
Europe have sought to coordinate their response to the crisis, imposing two
rounds of sanctions aimed at Putin's inner circle and freezing assets of
companies linked to them. On Friday they warned Russia
that sanctions targeting whole sections of the country's economy would be
inevitable unless Moscow de-escalates the
situation in Ukraine
before elections later this month.
Putin's
views must be taken into account in Ukraine ,
but Russia
does not have the right to violate Ukrainian territorial integrity or dictate
Ukrainian domestic policy," Obama said.
Merkel also
gave a strong endorsement of potential new sanctions. "In Europe , we have taken a position that should further
destabilisation happen, we will move to a third stage of sanctions," she
said.
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