Kiev, Ukraine (CNN) — Dozens of armed men seized the regional government administration building and parliament in Ukraine’s southern Crimea region Thursday and raised the Russian flag, in a challenge to the Eastern European country’s new leaders.
Crimea, with its ethnic Russian majority, is the last big bastion of opposition to the new political leadership in Kiev after Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych’s ouster Saturday.
The incident, coming a day after Russia ordered surprise military exercises on Ukraine’s doorstep, has raised fears about the push and pull of opposing allegiances in a country sandwiched between Russia and the European Union.
A broad divide has emerged between those who support what is going on in Kiev — where parliament was voting on an interim West-leaning government Thursday — and those who back Russia’s continued influence in Crimea and across Ukraine.
“I’m concerned about developments in #Crimea. I urge #Russia not to take any action that can escalate tension or create misunderstanding,” NATO Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen tweeted Thursday.
In turn, the Russian Foreign Ministry said the Kremlin will “give a tough and uncompromised response to violations of compatriots’ rights by foreign states.”
Opinion: Will Ukraine’s Crimea region be Europe’s next ‘frozen’ conflict?
No negotiations
It was not immediately known who was occupying the buildings in Simferopol, the regional capital. The head of the region, Premier Anatolii Mohyliov, told CNN the gunmen were refusing to speak with him, telling him he had no authority.
The men, who stormed the building early Thursday morning, had made no demands, and it was not clear what they wanted, he said.
He said there are no civilians in the building and “the situation is under control.”
He added that government security forces, which were outside the buildings, would not use force or weapons to take over the buildings.
“All police in Ukraine have been ordered to be prepared,” acting Ukrainian Interior Minister Arsen Avakov wrote on his Facebook page. “Orders have been issued to create a cordon around the Parliament in Crimea and to avoid shooting and violence.”
A witness, who gave his name only as Maxim, said he saw the armed men run into the building.
“Inside, nobody knows what is going on inside at the moment. We only saw the building being taken over,” he said. “When they took over the building, they kicked out police from there. More buses came and around 30 more people came out. They started to bring their bags and the bags had RPG’s (anti-tank weapons), there was SVD (sniper rifles), Kalashnikov (assault) rifles, handguns, so these people were fully armed.”
5 things you need to know about Ukraine’s Crimea region
Scuffles break out
Tensions have simmered in the Crimea region since Yanukovych’s ouster.
Scuffles broke out Wednesday as the mood soured among the thousands rallying in front of the Crimean parliament building.
One group waved Ukrainian flags and shouted “Crimea is not Russia,” while the other held Russian flags aloft and shouted “Crimea is Russia.”
Local leaders sought to calm the mood, urging the protesters to go home and resist provocations.
Military exercise
Also on Wednesday, Russia ordered military exercises near Ukraine. The timing of the move prompted speculation about the Kremlin’s motives.
Russian Defense Minister Sergey Shoigu said the exercises were to check “combat readiness.” And U.S. military intelligence saw no immediate indication the Russians were preparing for any offensive military action in Ukraine, two U.S. officials said.
Instead, the officials said intelligence suggests Russia is “repositioning” up to half a dozen Russian ships near the Ukrainian port city of Sevastopol in case they’re needed to respond if Russian interests are threatened.
Sevastopol is home to Russia’s Black Sea fleet. About 60% of the population in the city is Russian.
Secession fears
Concerns were heightened in the region when the Crimean parliament convened a previously unscheduled session Wednesday, amid local media reports that secession might be on the agenda.
But parliament Speaker Volodimir Konstantinov dismissed the reports as “rumors” and urged residents to not be provoked.
In Sevastopol, residents told CNN they were angry that Yanukovych had been forced out and fear that they will be oppressed by the country’s new leaders.
Many are struggling to come to grips with the rapid political upheaval.
Russia’s Foreign Ministry has accused Ukraine’s lawmakers of discriminating against ethnic Russians by excluding them from the reform process.
New government
In the capital, Kiev, Ukraine’s parliament met to vote in a new government Thursday after protest leaders named the ministers they want to form a new Cabinet.
Leaders of the popular demonstrations that toppled Yanukovych named former Economic Minister Arseny Yatsenyuk as their choice to head a new interim government.
In a display of people power, the announcement of Yatsenyuk and candidates for other key ministries was made Wednesday after protest leaders addressed crowds on Independence Square, the heart of the protests.
The crowd, some of them dressed in camouflage, cheered as the names were read out.
Lawmakers face the challenge of forming a body that genuinely represents all the main political parties, despite their widely divergent views.
Presidential and local elections are due on May 25. Opposition leader and former heavyweight boxing champion Vitali Klitschko will run for the presidency, his press secretary said.
Financial woes
Last week, bloody street clashes between demonstrators and security forces killed more than 80 people, the deadliest violence in the country since it gained independence when the Soviet Union collapsed 22 years ago.
Russia says Yanukovych was driven out by an “armed mutiny” of extremists and terrorists. A warrant has been issued for his arrest, but his whereabouts remain unknown.
While Yanukovych is on the run, the diplomatic wheels have been set in motion within the international community. One key concern is cash-strapped Ukraine’s perilous financial position.
Yanukovych’s decision to scrap a European Union trade deal in favor of one with Russia prompted the protests, which began in November.
CNN’s Ingrid Formanek reported from Kiev, and Marie-Louise Gumuchian and Laura Smith-Spark wrote from London. CNN’s Phil Black and Frederik Pleitgen also contributed to this report, as did journalist Azad Safarov.
http://www.cnn.com/2014/02/27/world/europe/ukraine-politics/index.html?hpt=hp_t1
Here as I see it we have the lessor of two evils. If the EU wins the Eukraine will be sacked and all their resources stolen and forced into a central bank and their money stolen not to mention their debt increased. On the other hand Russia has agreed to work with them on a cooperative level. I believe they will and I chose Russia as the best for them. That is the only option they have.
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That’s true. However, the Jews will try to force the hand to make the Bear look like the bad guy. Putin is pretty clever, will see how this plays out.
By the way, look at people funny when they tell you “pro-govt” protestors took the Crimea. It was RSOP. Putin will not lose E Ukraine to the morally bankrupt, Rothschild sucking fags (his words, not mine)….
Looks like the khazar ‘jews’ are doing a full court press on russia.
The two US ships in the black sea had absolutely nothing to do with the olympics…those ships are a nuclear gun to russia’s head.
I sure hope rothschild’s city of london and tel-aviv get their asses handed to them. If it does get nasty I’d also hope patriotic americans use the opportunity to get rid of their pest problem before the dust settles.
-flek
Putin needs to remain as inflexible on Crimea as he’s been on Syria and Iran.
Don’t give those AshkeNAZI Zionist scum an inch.