Ukraine crisis: Odessa detainees freed as police HQ attacked
Pro-Russian
activists have attacked the police headquarters in Ukraine's southern
city of Odessa, forcing the release of several people held over deadly
violence two days ago.
Ukraine's interim PM has accused police of failing to prevent the violence.
He was speaking as Ukrainian troops encircled Sloviansk in the east.
The army operation is trying to wrest control from separatists who have taken over a government buildings in a number of towns.
The initially peaceful rally in
Odessa on Sunday by hundreds of pro-Russians turned violent as
protesters - some wearing masks and carrying improvised weapons - broke
windows and forced the gates.
The Daily Telegraph's Roland Oliphant, at the scene, said Ukrainian flags had been pulled down and replaced with the Odessa city flag as tempers flared. Protesters used a lorry to force their way into the police compound.
Reuters news agency quoted police as saying 30 people had been freed.
Odessa had been observing a day of mourning for those killed on Friday, when running street battles involving petrol bombs led to a fire breaking out on the third floor of a trade union building.
Dozens of pro-Russian activists had barricaded themselves inside. While some were rescued, 38 people either burned, suffocated or jumped to their deaths.
Moscow and Kiev have blamed each other's supporters for the fire.
On Sunday, many visited the burned out trade union building, which now has a large Russian flag draped on one wall, to pay tribute.
Interim PM Arseniy Yatsenyuk, who has travelled to Odessa, has ordered a full investigation into what happened, saying the authorities did "nothing to stop this crackdown", and were "inefficient and they violated the law".
He told a news conference that all the senior police in the city had been fired and would be replaced.
Odessa
- City founded in 1794 by Empress Catherine the Great
- Population: 1m
- Ukraine's third largest city
- Hosts Ukrainian naval base
- Population: Ukrainian 62% ethnic Russian 29%
But he said the unrest was "part of a plan fomented by Russia to destroy Ukraine".
"Russia's aim was to repeat in Odessa what is happening in
the east of the country," where pro-Russian forces have taken control of
government buildings in a number of towns, he said.Mr Yatsenyuk insisted Kiev had not lost control entirely, saying much would depend on whether local populations "support peace and stability or whether they support those who are sponsored by Russian".
Labels: Aggression, Conflict, Russia, Ukraine
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