12:05
16.5.2014
11:32
16.5.2014
Donetsk separatists might be taking on eastern Ukrainian magnate Rinat Akhmetov, whose workers this week began patrolling cities alongside pro-Kyiv police, potentially turning the tide against pro-Russians and other separatists. It is suggesting he should pay his (considerable) taxes to the "Donetsk People's Republic," according to this Interfax report.
11:17
16.5.2014
11:16
16.5.2014
"Ukrayinskaya Pravda" reports that another local election official has been kidnapped, in Luhansk. It quotes Oleksandr Chernenko, who heads the watchdog group Committee of Voters of Ukraine. (via @LeonidRagozin)
11:10
16.5.2014
11:07
16.5.2014
Noting that Donetsk separatists' 24-hour deadline on an ultimatum for Ukrainian authorities to withdraw armored vehicles and remove its checkpoints from Donetsk has now expired, Interfax quotes breakaway "deputy commander" Serhiy Zdrylyuk as saying ahead of the deadline:
"I will wash my hands of it unless armored vehicles, personnel and etc are pulled back from Donetsk within the next few hours. I will no longer care who I am dealing with, either conscripts, young boys aged 18, or elderly professionals or especially mercenaries. Everything will be burned down and destroyed unless the hardware is pulled 20-30 kilometers back from Donetsk. I already have intelligence and sabotage groups."
11:02
16.5.2014
"Kyiv Post" quotes the Interior Ministry as saying that authorities investigating the May 2 violence in Odesa have "apprehended" two groups suspected of selling ammunition to "radicalized individuals."
10:51
16.5.2014
An AP crew in Mariupol says no sign of insurgents this morning:
MARIUPOL, Ukraine (AP) — Pro-Russian insurgents have retreated from government buildings in a major eastern Ukrainian city as steelworkers began citizen patrols.
Mariupol, second-largest city in the Donetsk region, was one of the cities in the east overrun by pro-Russian protesters who have been in control of government buildings there for weeks.
Citizen patrols began earlier this week as Rinat Akhmetov, Ukraine's richest man who is believed to wield great influence in the area, urged the steelworkers at his factories to help the police restore order in the city.
Akhmetov's Metinvest initiated Thursday's agreement with steel plant directors, local police and community leaders on improving security in the city and vacating separatist-occupied buildings. A representative of the self-proclaimed Donetsk People's Republic, which declared independence on Monday, was also party to the deal.
An Associated Press crew did not see any insurgent presence in Mariupol Friday morning.
Mariupol, second-largest city in the Donetsk region, was one of the cities in the east overrun by pro-Russian protesters who have been in control of government buildings there for weeks.
Citizen patrols began earlier this week as Rinat Akhmetov, Ukraine's richest man who is believed to wield great influence in the area, urged the steelworkers at his factories to help the police restore order in the city.
Akhmetov's Metinvest initiated Thursday's agreement with steel plant directors, local police and community leaders on improving security in the city and vacating separatist-occupied buildings. A representative of the self-proclaimed Donetsk People's Republic, which declared independence on Monday, was also party to the deal.
An Associated Press crew did not see any insurgent presence in Mariupol Friday morning.
10:50
16.5.2014
Is Russia making plans to ban Twitter?
10:38
16.5.2014
Polish Foreign Minister Sikorski (right) and Ukrainian counterpart Andriy Deshchytsya are meeting in Kyiv.