[File photo] Valery Bolotov waits to cast his vote in Lugansk on May 11, 2014 |
The incident took place
in the village of Oktyabrski in the Slovyansk region, about 20
kilometers from Kramatorsk, during "a unit movement from the military
base." The location is in volatile eastern Ukraine.
"Our soldiers were
attacked in an ambush. Terrorists attacked our land troops with
grenades. The attackers were more than 30 people and set an ambush near
the river," the ministry said.
"After a long shootout, six soldiers of The Ukrainian Armed Services were killed," the statement said.
In another incident in
eastern #Ukraine, a separatist leader has been injured in a suspected
assassination attempt, a spokesman said Tuesday, amid continuing turmoil
in the wake of a controversial weekend referendum on independence.
A car carrying the
"Luhansk people's governor" Valeriy Bolotov was fired on Tuesday in the
Luhansk region, said Vasiliy Nikitin, a spokesman for the self-declared
"Luhansk People's Republic."
Bolotov suffered a
gunshot injury, but Nikitin said it was "light" and not life
threatening. It is not known who was behind the shooting.
The reported attacks
comesamid simmering tensions in Donetsk and Luhansk regions, where
pro-Russian separatists staged a referendum Sunday asking residents
whether they should declare independence from Ukraine.
Speaking in Brussels,
Ukrainian Prime Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk had strong words for Russia,
saying it continues to support the separatists behind the unrest.
"Russia will fail to make a failed state," he said, as he urged Moscow to condemn the pro-Russian militants.
Yatsenyuk said the
priority for Ukraine was to hold free and fair national elections on May
25, after which, he said, "we expect to have a new, legitimate
president."
The Prime Minister
warned that Ukraine would pursue #Russia through the courts over its
annexation in March of Ukraine's Crimea territory, including an oil and
natural gas company based there.
Ukraine will also
challenge Russian energy giant Gazprom in court unless it agrees to
renegotiate the price it charges Ukraine for natural gas supplies,
Yatsenyuk said. Gazprom said the recent sharp increase, from $268.50 to
$485 per 1,000 cubic meters, was necessary because Ukraine is billions
of dollars in arrears.
Yatsenyuk said Ukraine would pay what it owes, but only if Gazprom revises the natural gas deal in line with market rates.
"Russia is to stop using natural gas as another type of Russian weapon," he said.
'Decisive role'
German Foreign Minister
Frank-Walter Steinmeier, speaking alongside Yatsenyuk earlier in Kiev,
warned that the situation in eastern Ukraine is "still dangerous and
threatening," and backed efforts by the interim government to start a
national dialogue.
Steinmeier said the May
25 presidential elections would play a "decisive role" in restoring calm
to Ukraine and urged steps to disarm the illegal separatist groups who
have seized key buildings in the east.
He also praised the interim government for its handling of the crisis.
Steinmeier's visit is
the latest in a series by foreign diplomats seeking a peaceful
resolution to what has become the worst East-West crisis since the end
of the Cold War.
Their efforts have done little so far to prevent pro-Russian militants from tightening their grip on Ukraine's east and south
Nearly 90% of voters in
the Donetsk area favored secession, the head of the central election
commission for the self-declared Donetsk People's Republic said Tuesday.
He said just over 10% voted against the move.
Separatist leader Denis
Pushilin said Monday that the #Donetsk region was not only independent,
but also would ask to join Russia. There was no immediate response from
Ukraine's government or the European Union.
Pushilin's announcement
was reminiscent of separatists' moves in the Black Sea peninsula of
Crimea, which Russia annexed after Crimeans voted to secede from Ukraine
and join Russia in a March 16 referendum.
Acting Ukrainian
President Oleksandr Turchynov said Monday of the referendum: "That farce
the terrorists call a referendum is nothing else but a propagandist
cover for killings, kidnapping, violence and other grave crimes."
EU, Canada impose sanctions
Sunday's referendum was also widely condemned by the international community.
In its wake, Western
leaders have imposed fresh sanctions in the hopes of pressuring Russia
into reining in the pro-Russian militants.
The European Union
sanctioned 13 people Monday over the Ukraine crisis, bringing the total
number subject to EU visa bans and asset freezes to 61, an EU diplomat
said. Two Crimean entities are also sanctioned.
Those targeted in the latest round, whose names were only released Tuesday,
include Vyacheslav Ponomaryov, the self-declared Mayor of Slovyansk, a
rebel stronghold in the Donetsk region, and Vladimir Shamanov, commander
of the Russian airborne troops.
Meanwhile, Canada has
imposed sanctions on 12 additional people, six Russians and six
Ukrainians, Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper said in a statement.
Canada's expanded
sanctions list includes Russian military chief Valery Gerasimov; Russian
State Duma vice-speakers Sergei Neverov and Lyudmila Shevtsova; and
Igor Girkin, known as "Strelok," who is accused of being a Russian
saboteur and militant leader in eastern Ukraine.
Also named by Canada are
Crimean politicians and five representatives of the self-proclaimed
republics and militias in the Donetsk and Luhansk regions.
Canada's government had
previously approved sanctions against nine Russian politicians and
businessmen, two Russian credit organizations and 16 Russian companies.
Russia, which said it
respected the will of the people of Luhansk and Donetsk in Sunday's
vote, has not so far responded to Pushilin's announcement that he will
seek annexation by the Russian Federation.
Moscow denies having
direct influence over the separatist groups. They went ahead with the
referendum despite a call from Russian President Vladimir Putin to delay
it.
Russian Deputy Foreign
Minister Sergei Ryabkov told reporters Monday that Russia finds the EU
sanctions highly regrettable, according to Russian state media.
"It's an absolutely
thoughtless and irresponsible policy that doesn't match reality in any
way," news agency ITAR Tass quoted him as saying.
Hague: More sanctions in the pipeline
Addressing Parliament in
London on Tuesday, UK Foreign Secretary William Hague urged Russia to
use its influence to de-escalate the situation and disarm the militants
-- or face more tough measures.
Additional sanctions are being prepared, he said, and the European Union is ready to impose them if needed.
"Because we have now
widened the criteria substantially there are now many more individuals
and entities who could be added," he said of the sanctions list.
Hague added that planning for a range of wider economic and trade measures is "at an advanced stage."
EU members accepted that
such measures would hurt their own economies as well as Russia's, Hague
said, but were united over the "triggers" that would mean they were
brought into force.
On Twitter, Hague said
that Britain would back Ukraine's May 25 presidential elections by
providing 100 observers for the Organization for Security and
Cooperation mission and £429,000 ($723,000) in financial aid.
Source: CNN News
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