15:37
2.5.2014
15:19
2.5.2014
The live stream from Odesa just now showed a man in black wearing a red arm band shooting a pistol into a crowd of pro-Ukraine demonstrators from a position on a roof top. Other men with arm bands were throwing objects into the crowd from the roof.
15:13
2.5.2014
Escalation in Odesa? Journalist Howard Amos tweeted this photo purportedly showing pro-Ukrainian activists preparing Molotov cocktails:
15:12
2.5.2014
Pro-Maidan website says pro-Russian demonstrators and sympathetic police in Odesa using red arm bands to identify one another:
15:08
2.5.2014
OSCE Representative on Freedom of the Media Dunja Mijatovic has issued a statement calling on all sides in Ukraine to "show respect for media freedom." She said that journalists in Ukraine are "being subjected to brutal violence, kidnappings, aand intimidation while media outlets are repeatedly seized by armed individuals who switch off Ukrainian broadcasts to replace them with Russian ones."
15:03
2.5.2014
Russian President Vladimir Putin has signed an order appointing Natalya Poklonskaya as Crimea regional prosecutor.
14:58
2.5.2014
Here is a solid analytical piece by Russian military analyst Igor Sutyagin (et al) about why Slovyansk is such an important strategic target.
"Kiev knows that it has a strategic reserve of Kalashnikov assault rifles and other light weapons stored in Ukraine as a mobilisation reserve dating back to Soviet times. It has hinted quietly but strongly in back channels between Ukrainian and Russian military establishments that it might be prepared to open this strategic reserve of weapons to an eastern Ukrainian population prepared to resist any Russian military incursions. Since the stockpile consists of up to five million weapons, the prospect would be a nightmare for Russian military planners if they realistically prepared to move into eastern areas of Ukraine. The prospect of civil war and an anti-Russian insurgency on an unprecedented scale with unpredictable consequences represents a real – if extremely dangerous – bargaining chip for Kiev."
"Kiev knows that it has a strategic reserve of Kalashnikov assault rifles and other light weapons stored in Ukraine as a mobilisation reserve dating back to Soviet times. It has hinted quietly but strongly in back channels between Ukrainian and Russian military establishments that it might be prepared to open this strategic reserve of weapons to an eastern Ukrainian population prepared to resist any Russian military incursions. Since the stockpile consists of up to five million weapons, the prospect would be a nightmare for Russian military planners if they realistically prepared to move into eastern areas of Ukraine. The prospect of civil war and an anti-Russian insurgency on an unprecedented scale with unpredictable consequences represents a real – if extremely dangerous – bargaining chip for Kiev."
14:55
2.5.2014
CBS News has posted an interview with CBS correspondent Clarissa Ward, who was detained by pro-Russian militants outside Slovyansk earlier on May 2.
"We were blindfolded with cloth and masking tape really quite tightly around our heads so we couldn't see anything at all," Ward told "CBS This Morning" over the phone not long after they were freed.
"We were blindfolded with cloth and masking tape really quite tightly around our heads so we couldn't see anything at all," Ward told "CBS This Morning" over the phone not long after they were freed.
14:50
2.5.2014
14:48
2.5.2014
A tweet from U.S. Ambassador to Ukraine Geoffrey Pyatt:
provoked this response:
provoked this response: