Ukraine Says Another 13 of its Troops Die in Conflict-Torn East

W460

Fears mounted Saturday in Ukraine of a possible Russian invasion in the guise of a "humanitarian" mission to the conflict-torn east where Kiev said another 13 of its troops died in fighting with pro-Moscow rebels.

The United States has warned that any unilateral intervention by Russia, including in the form of a humanitarian mission, would be considered an invasion.

Shelling meanwhile continued in the rebels' main eastern stronghold of Donetsk, which has become the new battleground in the four-month conflict between Ukrainian government forces and eastern separatists.

An Agence France Presse journalist heard repeated shelling in the city throughout the morning. Local authorities said mortar fire hit neighborhoods north and southwest of the center, and one person was killed.

Ukraine's forces, which have been battling to wrest control of eastern strongholds from the rebels, which the West believes to be backed by Russia, reported 13 casualties in the last 24 hours.

The Red Cross also announced it was stepping up its aid activities in Donetsk and the second main insurgent bastion of Lugansk where local authorities have warned of a looming humanitarian catastrophe with many residents left without water and power for days.

A top official from Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko's office revealed late Friday that Kiev had managed through diplomatic channels to halt a Russian convoy, including troops and military hardware, advancing towards the border under the guise of a humanitarian mission.

"The Ukrainian side has reasonable grounds to believe that the convoy could be used to further escalate tensions," the foreign ministry added on Saturday.

The Red Cross acknowledged that it had received an offer from Moscow to organize aid convoys, and would welcome any effort to ease civilian suffering in the region, but denied Saturday that any such action had taken place.

NATO says Russia has 20,000 troops along the Ukrainian border, fueling fears that Moscow could send them into its former Soviet neighbor.

U.S. ambassador to the U.N. Samantha Power on Friday slammed Russian proposals to set up humanitarian corridors to east Ukraine.

A "unilateral intervention by Russia in Ukrainian territory, including one under the guise of providing humanitarian aid, would be completely unacceptable and deeply alarming and would be viewed as an invasion of Ukraine," she said.

She drew a parallel with the 2008 crisis in South Ossetia, when Russia justified sending troops into the Georgian territory in response to civilian suffering.

Russia's Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov hit back Saturday that Power’s comments demonstrated the extent of "anti-Russian hysteria" in Washington.

"Our proposal has clearly humanitarian objectives but our initiative is tossed aside and they only talk about how Russia would supposedly try to slip into Ukraine under the guise of humanitarian aid something that doesn't please the U.S.," he told ITAR-TASS news agency.

In Donetsk, an AFP reporter heard loud explosions in two different locations around 6 am (0300 GMT) Saturday and again later in the morning. Apartment blocks and a hostel in the Kievsky district north of the city had shattered windows and there was shelling damage inside flats, AFP witnessed.

A local resident said: "It was the Ukrainian authorities. They have been firing on the (self-proclaimed) Donetsk People's Republic all morning from the direction of the airport."

The one-million-strong city has been at the heart of fighting in recent days as government forces seek to recapture rebel strongholds and cut them off from the Russian border. Almost 50 troops have been killed over the last three days alone.

So far, the four-month conflict has left over 1,300 dead and over 4,000 injured, according to the U.N.

The Red Cross announced it was stepping up its activities in eastern Ukraine citing the "deteriorating humanitarian and security environments" there.

Red Cross spokeswoman Sitara Jabeen told AFP however that aid could only be distributed "if our teams have safe access to work in those areas."

Local authorities in Lugansk said Saturday that the situation was "critical," with no power, running water or phone connections for a week now, while fuel had run out and food supplies were running low.

Some 285,000 people have fled their homes in four months of what the Red Cross has already called a civil war.

The sanctions war between Russia and the West also simmered on with France now threatening to take Moscow to the World Trade Organization over its food embargo -- a tit-for-tat move taken in retaliation for massive EU and U.S. sanctions against Russia over its support for the Ukrainian rebels.

Tensions between Russia and the West have hit their highest point since the Cold War over the crisis in Ukraine.

Comments 2
Thumb cityboy 09 August 2014, 16:51

Don't you know Russia, invading based on a humanitarian mission is only exclusive to the United States. They are the experts in this field, just look at the success achieved in Afghanistan, Iraq, and Libya.

Thumb chrisrushlau 09 August 2014, 18:15

And the proper term for Ukrainian soldiers is "service members". This is because all Ukrainian service members are Catholics, and thus devoted to God and the common good. This is the "good news" that Christian politicians want to bring to Lebanon as well: just give us your trust, never mind about voting, and we will deliver you to the land of milk and honey if Israel agrees. Pope Francis has reportedly agreed with Patriarch al Rahi to provide armaments for three Lebanese armored divisions and two aircraft carrier battle groups, using his "Peter's Pence" special savings account in the Vatican Bank. Patriarch al Rahi joked that the Pope must now find some Lebanese sailors who won't get sea-sick. I'm sorry. That was the Pope's joke.