Ukraine’s military suffered heavy casualties in a stepped-up offensive on pro-Russian rebels yesterday, as Europe and the head of the UN made a last-ditch diplomatic effort to reel the country back from the brink of civil war.
At least four Ukrainian servicemen were killed and 30 injured battling heavily armed insurgents around the flashpoint eastern town of Slavyansk as Russia warned that the violence was putting peace in Europe in peril.
The interior ministry in Kiev said that the pro-Russian gunmen controlling the town were using civilians as human shields and shooting from houses, some of which were ablaze.
“They are waging a war on us, on our own territory... my mission is to eliminate the terrorists,” Interior Minister Arsen Avakov told reporters near Slavyansk, from where he was overseeing the assault.
Head of Ukraine’s national guard Stepan Poltorak said: “We have bottled them (the rebels) up in the centre” of Slavyansk, but added that “our adversaries are well-trained and well-equipped’’.
Authorities in the regional capital Donetsk said one civilian in Slavyansk was killed and some 15 wounded in the fighting.
The advance on Slavyansk was part of a wider military operation in the east to root out the separatist insurgents, who are holding more than a dozen towns.
The authorities retook control of the TV tower near Slavyansk but lost a helicopter, cut down by machine gun fire. The pilots survived.
Russia, which denies any hand in the violence, warned in a foreign ministry report yesterday that the unrest in Ukraine was now “fraught with such destructive consequences for Europe’s peace, stability and democratic development that it is absolutely necessary to prevent it’’.
The report accused Ukrainian “ultra-nationalists” — who Moscow claims control Kiev’s government — of rights violations on a “mass” scale.
Moscow later warned of an evolving “humanitarian disaster” in eastern Ukraine where it said Kiev was carrying out “terror against its own people’’.
But Ukraine’s interim president declared it was Russian meddling that had brought war to his country. He warned that the pro-Russian provocateurs might stage violence in Kiev during celebrations on Friday marking the Soviet victory over Nazi Germany in World War II.