Monday 30 June 2014

Moscow demands objective investigation into death of Russian journalist in Donetsk



The Russian Foreign Ministry has demanded that Kiev conduct objective investigation into the death of Channel One journalist in the Donetsk Region. The ministry also asked to find and punish the culprits behind the death of cameraman Anatoly Klyan. "Cruel and absolutely illegitimate pursuit of Russian reporters continues in Ukraine," the document said.

"We are outraged with Kiev's line regarding reporters from Russia working in dangerous conditions in Ukraine and demand that such pursuits and outrage be stopped immediately and those guilty be punished. After all, Ukraine must start fulfilling its international obligations in the sector of human rights and supremacy of law," the Russian Foreign Ministry posted a statement on Monday

Channel One operator Alexander Klyan died at the hands of Kiev law enforcers on June 28, and reporters of the LifeNews, REN TV and Mir 24 TV channels came under fire, the Foreign Ministry said.

"The attacks on our reporters occur amid repeated assurances of [Ukrainian] President Petr Poroshenko on readiness to settle the situation in southeast of the country and to achieve truce. In reality, the Ukrainian authorities cut the attempts to bring the truth about events happening to global community with any means, even direct provocations posing a threat to lives of Russian citizens," the statement said.

"It is evident now that reporters courageously carrying out their professional duties are the target of Ukrainian special services and radical nationalists. Kiev does not disdain such methods as physical violence, intentional shootings of reporters and torture banned by international law," the Foreign Ministry said, Interfax reports.
According to the statement, "the requests of Russia and other representatives of the global community - to hold objective investigations of all incidents of attacks on our reporters and other attacks on civilians in the conflict zone - addressed to the Ukrainian authorities remain unanswered as of now."

Another journalist killed; Russia's Channel One cameraman sustained a lethal abdominal wound in a trip to a military camp in Donetsk. This is the latest episode in a series of journalists being injured or killed in Ukraine.
Overnight into Monday, June 30 four camera crews from Russia’s four different TV stations were attacked. MIR 24, LifeNews and Ren-TV journalists were lucky, Channel One lost a life.

The trip to the military unit near Donetsk, where the operator for Russia’s top federal channel died, was organized by the press service of the self-proclaimed Donetsk People's Republic (DPR).

During the attack the Ukrainian military gunned a bus with group of Russian Channel One journalists and mothers of enlisted soldiers. As a result, the team’s operator Anatoly Klyan was fatally wounded in the stomach and died in the ambulance on the way to the hospital. The bus driver sustained a neck injury and at the expense of his own life managed to drive the vehicle away from fire and save his passengers.

"Tonight, our colleague Anatoly Klyan, cameraman for the Channel One, died in Donetsk," the TV channel's statement said. "The tragedy happened near one of army units, where the crew came to film a report. At the site, shots were unexpectedly fired from the side of the servicemen. Anatoly Klyan received a fatal gunshot wound to the abdomen. He was 68 years old."

The soldiers' mothers had an argument with officers before the gunfire which killed Russia's Channel One cameraman started, DPR parliament deputy Oleg Frolov told Interfax about the incident on Monday.
"The bus the women were riding carried "Son, Come Home" and other signs. It was clear that women were on the bus. After they had reached the military unit camp, several officers approached the bus and rudely told the women to leave the area in front of the military unit gate. Then they opened fire on the bus," Frolov said.
There were no militiamen on the attacked bus, DPR First Deputy Prime Minister Andrei Purgin told Interfax. "It was a bus carrying civilians, women and journalists. There was not a single militiaman on that bus," the DPR first vice-premier indicated.

Russia’s MIR 24 correspondents were gunned in the Donetsk region as well, but survived the attack.
"When we went to the scene of armed hostilities there was not a single checkpoint, no roadblocks. Having entered the city, one of the supporters of the self-proclaimed Republic practically threw himself under our wheels and asked we stop the car. Immediately, a flair flew into the air and our car was shot at. Thankfully, we were able to run out and hide," MIR 24 press service cites its correspondent Alexander Leonenko as saying.
During the same attack that killed Channel One’s operator Anatloly Klyan, REN-TV and LifeNews television crews also came under gunfire. These journalists were not hurt and managed to escape.

LiveNews correspondent Kirill Olkov told of how he and his operator Marat Abulhatin managed to escape during an attack by Ukrainian law enforcers near Donetsk.

They had a trip to the same military unit that attacked Channel One journalists that was also organized by DPR’s press service. According to them, the Ukrainian military radar location unit in Avdeevo was supposed to lay down their arms on June 29 around 11 pm local time.

"DPR press service invited us to go to a military unit. The bus with the federal channel journalists and the soldiers' mothers were sent there as well," said Olkov. "We decided to take a taxi. But things did not go according to plan, the negotiations were wrecked."

According to the journalist, they were waiting for the bus to arrive at the Donetsk military base #1428. At that point the unit opened fire using Kalashnikov guns.

"We stopped about 500 meters away from the facility. Marat Abulhatin and the taxi driver went out, I stayed in the cabin and that's when the shooting started," said Olkov.

"It was machine-gun fire, knocked out the windshield. I jumped out of the car and fell down onto the asphalt. Flare lights appeared in the sky. They illuminated the perimeter almost as if it were the middle of the day. We were in full view and they opened fire again. We had to crawl about 400 meters along the road to escape."

Kirill Olkov said they managed to flee the concentrated fire in a field. Then, he said, the Ukrainian military used more heavy guns, grenade launchers and mortars.

"One mine exploded 20 meters away from us. For over an hour we were trying to get out of that field. But the security forces constantly fired flares and immediately resumed fire, trying to take us down," said the journalist. "It is a miracle that we managed to get to a bypass road. We phoned our acquaintances and one of the taxi drivers was able to get us out and take us to the nearest checkpoint."

As in the case the deaths of reporter Igor Kornelyuk and sound engineer Anton Voloshin, Moscow demands that Kiev find and punish those responsible. The Russian Investigative Committee has opened a criminal case in connection to Klyan’s murder under article 356 of the Russian Criminal Code (murder of a person in the line of duty in a socially dangerous way). Russian Foreign Ministry accuses Ukraine of blocking the fragile truce. The Investigative Committee declared it will continue to gather evidence of the crimes and will do its best consistent with the current legislation to punish every culprit of these crimes.

Repeatedly, the murder of journalists was condemned by the UN, Reporters without Borders and a number of other international, governmental, non-governmental and human rights organizations.

Yet as in the case of Igor Kornelyuk and Anton Voloshin, no one has been punished. On the contrary, in the past few months the attacks on Russian journalists in Ukraine seem to only intensify.

On May 9 a young cameraman from RT's video crew Fedor Zavaleykov was wounded during fighting in Mariupol.
On June 11 a Channel One crew member came under fire in a small town called Semenovka near Slavyansk.On May 20, a British journalist working for RT was detained by military forces at a checkpoint in Mariupol, transferred to an army barracks and interrogated by Ukrainian security forces for 36 hours.

On June 14, Russian TV channel Zvezda reported two of its journalists detained.

Just a few days later, on June 16, a group of journalists from RT's video crew came under fire – again - near Slavyansk.

The first Russian journalists to die while on professional duty were Russian TV reporter Igor Kornelyuk and sound engineer Anton Voloshin who were killed in a shelling this June. They were shooting a news story of Ukrainian refugees fleeing the small town Metallist in the Lugansk region when hit with mortar shells. Now, four crews came under deadly attack on one single night.

In total, six media workers have been killed since the beginning of the year, four of which are Russian; two cameramen Voloshin and Klyan, one correspondent Kornelyuk, and Andrei Mironov who was an assistant to an Italian photographer Andrea Rokkelli, also killed. A correspondent of Ukrainian newspaper "Vesti" Vyacheslav Veremei also died in the line of duty at the hands of his own countrymen.

These are just some examples of how journalists and video crew members for the media are being treated in Ukraine. Getting the right information and the straight facts has become a deadly risk in some regions of Ukraine. The most recent stories show just how cruel players on the battlefield can be to those who are at the altar of truth
 
Source: Voice of Russia 30-06-2014

Sunday 29 June 2014

Right Sector fighters recruited into Ukrainian army battalion - Lugansk People's Republic



The radical organization Right Sector fighters are recruited into the Aydar battalion of the Ukrainian National Guard destroyed by the militia with its fighters, Chairman of the Supreme Council of the self-proclaimed Lugansk People's Republic (LPR) Alexey Karyakin said at a press conference on Saturday.

Aydar is one of the many "nominal" battalions of the Ukrainian law-enforcers that participated in the hostilities in the South-East of the country. According to a report by the Ministry of Defense of Ukraine, on June 17, the Aydar battalion without the consent of the command of the special operation decided to storm the militia in Lugansk, but was ambushed and suffered serious losses despite the received reinforcement.


Head of the self-proclaimed Lugansk People's Republic Valery Bolotov said that the militia had almost completely destroyed Aydar.

After the incident, the Ministry of Defense recalled the remains of Aydar and decided to disband it, but recently it became known that President Petr Poroshenko had suspended the decision.
"Now, we have information that the destroyed Aydar battalion is being remaned with fighters of the Right Sector in order to show that it was not defeated and operates on a full scale," said Karyakin. He noted that the Right Sector was actively operating on the territory of the LPR.


A road leading to the village of Izvarino, in which area there is a checkpoint between the self-proclaimed Lugansk People's Republic (LPR) and Russia, is permanently fired at by snipers, Chairman of the Supreme Council of the LPR Alexey Karyakin said at the press conference today.
"The road to Izvarino lies directly through the area of accumulation of the Ukrainian forces. There occur such situations, when snipers fire at passing cars. Provocations occur on the part of the Ukrainian army," Karyakin said.

He noted that such incidents with participation of the Ukrainian law enforcers are confirmed rather often. On the night of June 21, a battle between the LPR militia and the Ukrainian law-enforcers began in the territory of Ukraine, near the customs checkpoint Izvarino on the border with Russia.
 
Source: The Voice of Russia 29-06-2014

Saturday 28 June 2014

Check-point captured by self defence forces



During a night of fighting for a check-point near Slavyansk 20 Ukrainian soldiers were killed. The self-defense forces also destroyed 2 armoured vehicles. As a result of the clashes the self-defense forces kicked away the Ukrainian soldiers from the check-point. The check point is now under the control of the self defence forces, who are laying mines to prevent the Ukrainian army getting near again.

Self-defense forces also commandeered 1 armoured vehicle, 1 mortar launcher "Vasilek" with full ammunition equipment, 1 launch vehicle ATGM "Fagot", 3 grenade machine guns "Plamya" with full ammunition equipment and several automatic weapons. There is video evidence to confirm all these reports.

This action took place during the ceasefire because the Ukraine army continues to shell the town and other targets in the Donetsk area. The Ukraine junta claim to have extended the ceasefire by 72 hours, but at the same time they order more military operations. The self defence forces are responding whenever necessary.

Sources: Donbass Revolution and South Front 28-06-2014

Friday 27 June 2014

Ukraine-EU Association Agreement will have serious consequences - Russian Deputy FM



Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Grigory Karasin said that Ukraine has a sovereign right to sign an Association Agreement with European Union, but this step will have serious consequences.

"Definitely, the signing of such significant document is a sovereign right of every state," he told Interfax.

"There is no doubt that the signing [of association agreements with the EU] by Ukraine and Moldova will have major consequences but we should rather not make commonplace remarks but assess the implications in order to avoid various kinds of misunderstandings and suspicions in the future," the diplomat added.
 
Source: The Voice of Russia 27-06-2014

Thursday 26 June 2014

'The US is pushing its NATO allies to sanction Russia to please Wall Street'



The US is aggressively pushing NATO allies in Europe towards sanctions, while some of them are resisting for their own economic interests because it is harmful to them, Sara Flounders, the head of the International Action Center told RT.

RT:Russian lawmakers have withdrawn permission for troops to be deployed in Ukraine. Given this, why do the US and the EU continue to consider putting sanctions in place?

Sara Flounders: Really because there is no reasonable measure or accommodation or understanding that Russia can take that will satisfy the US. Really, the crisis in Ukraine is about expansion of NATO, it is about an entirely aggressive plan by the US, by the Pentagon, which is determined to encircle Russia. So this new piece of legislation like the other steps and the other efforts of discussion that have been put forward by Russia have come to nothing. The US is aggressively pushing its NATO allies in Europe for sanctions, and some of them are resisting for their own economic interests because it is actually very harmful to them. But of course it would be good for Wall Street, and this is part of the reason to push for sanctions because they do not want to see normalized trade between Russia and Ukraine with Germany, France and the EU countries. The excuse of sanctions is really one way to shut this down.

RT: The US Secretary of State John Kerry said President Putin must prove 'by actions, not just words' that he is committed to peace. What is he expecting do you think?

SF: Anything that Russia does short of put up a white flag of surrender is not going to satisfy the US at this point. It is very important, when you look at what happened in the Ukraine which was an effort through a fascist grouping to seize and overthrow an elected government and then to organize elections that millions of people refused to participate in. Each step both of the illegal government and after the elections were immediately recognized by the White House, immediately, a government that has no standing at all. This shows that there is this confrontation that the US is determined to make, and what they are demanding of Russia is that Ukraine be handed over to NATO. That’s completely outrageous, unacceptable, and an attack on the sovereignty of Ukraine and of course it is also meant as an attack on Russia with an expansion of NATO. This is extremely dangerous policy, very aggressive policy, and yet it is being pursued, and the US is demanding that the EU countries go along with it.

RT: Could there be ramifications for the US and EU if they go ahead with more measures against Moscow?

SF: No, I do not think that they will, I certainly hope not. And whether the sanctions can even be implemented, the US is making demands on a lot of countries around the world imposing sanctions right and left. That is also a source of their great frustration with Russia at this point. The US was attempting a total take over in Syria, and Russia and China stood up with a veto. They had a very aggressive policy towards Iran. Nevertheless, Russia has continued its relations with Iran. So the anger at Russia today and the anger at Putin’s policies are that Russia refused to accommodate itself for the expansion of NATO and to aggressive moves that are only of benefit to Wall Street and to none of the other countries that want normalized trade, normal economic and political exchanges. There is a lot at stake in Ukraine, and as I said it chose a very aggressive move by the US, it also is an aggressive move by the US that the people in the Eastern and Southern Ukraine calling for a referendum and putting forward their own demands for saving the economic future of Ukraine. It is very important to listen to them, because they are also demanding a voice in the future of their own country.

RT: How far do you think Washington can go with its measures against Moscow? Do you think sanctioning Moscow will help to bring peace to Ukraine?

SF: I certainly hope that other European countries, the EU, do not go along with this. There have been many efforts to forestall it because they know that it will cause them a great deal of harm. It involves trade of course, involves the exchange, the industrial capacity of Ukraine, but it also is an effort to reign in and to impose on Russia economic demands that are completely at odds with Russia’s own economic and political future. This is Wall Street speaking at a time of growing global economic crisis, so they are in a ruthless mood.
The statements, views and opinions expressed in this column are solely those of the author and do not necessarily represent those of RT.

Source: Russia Today 26-06-2014