Ukrainians gather near piles of flowers and tyres as they remember those killed during the recent violent protests in Kiev.

Armed men took control of two airports in the Crimea region yesterday in what the new Ukrainian leadership described as an invasion and occupation by Moscow’s forces, and ousted president Viktor Yanukovych reappeared in Russia after a week on the run.

Yanukovych said that Russia should use all means at its disposal to stop the chaos in Ukraine as tension rose on the Black Sea peninsula of Crimea, the only region with an ethnic Russian majority and the last major bastion of resistance to the overthrow of the Moscow-backed leader.

More than 10 Russian military helicopters flew into Ukrainian airspace yesterday over Crimea, Kiev’s border guard service said, accusing Russian servicemen of blockading one of its units in the port city of Sevastopol, where part of Moscow’s Black Sea fleet is based.

A serviceman at the scene confirmed to Reuters that he was from the Black Sea Fleet and said they were there to stop the kind of protests that ousted Yanukovych in Kiev.

The fleet denied its forces were involved in seizing one of the airports, Interfax news agency reported, while a supporter described the armed group at the other site as Crimean militiamen.

Moscow has promised to defend the interests of its citizens in Ukraine.

While it has said it will not intervene by force, its rhetoric since the removal of Yanukovych a week ago has echoed the run-up to its invasion of Georgia in 2008.

Any armed confrontation in Crimea would have major global repercussions, with tensions already heightened between Russia and the West over the change of power in Ukraine and supporting opposite sides in Syria’s civil war. They have, however, pledged to co-operate to prop up Ukraine’s faltering economy.

Ukraine’s top security official, Andriy Paruby, said the armed men were taking their orders from the top in Russia.

“These are separate groups ... commanded by the Kremlin,” Paruby, secretary of the National Security and Defence Council, told a televised briefing in Kiev.

One of the options being considered was declaring a state of emergency in Crimea, he added.

The foreign ministers of France, Germany and Poland, who negotiated a peace deal to end violence in Kiev earlier this month, urged all parties to refrain from any action endangering Ukraine’s territorial integrity.

Russia announced war games on Wednesday near the Ukrainian border, putting 150,000 troops on high alert, although US Secretary of State John Kerry said his Russian counterpart, Sergei Lavrov, had told him the exercises were pre-planned.

Yanukovych – who is wanted by the new government for mass murder after the deaths of protesters in Kiev last week – resurfaced in the Russian city of Rostov-on-Don yesterday.

He said he had not seen Russian President Vladimir Putin but had spoken to him on the telephone and was surprised the Russian leader was not more vocal over Ukraine.

“Russia cannot be indifferent, cannot be a bystander watching the fate of as close a partner as Ukraine,” Yanukovych told a news conference. “Russia must use all means at its disposal to end the chaos and terror gripping Ukraine.”

He denied he had run away, saying that he had been forced to leave Kiev due to threats and denounced “lawlessness, terror, anarchy and chaos” in the country.

Switzerland, Austria and Liechtenstein moved yesterday to freeze assets and bank accounts of up to 20 Ukrainians including Yanukovych and his son. Yanukovych said talk of foreign bank accounts was “empty chatter”.

Ukraine’s new rulers have said loans worth $37bn went missing from state accounts during Yanukovych’s three years in power – a jaw-dropping sum even for a population now used to tales of a lavish lifestyle and opulent residence outside Kiev.

The new Ukrainian leadership has said the country needs almost as much as that – $35bn – over the next two years to stave off bankruptcy.

It said yesterday that it hoped to get financial aid soon and was prepared to fulfil the reform criteria of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) to get it.

IMF chief Christine Lagarde said she did not see anything on the economic front worthy of panic and urged the leadership to refrain from throwing numbers about she said were meaningless until properly assessed.

Interior Minister Arsen Avakov accused Russian naval forces of taking over a military airport near the port of Sevastopol, where the Black Sea fleet has a base, and other Russian forces of seizing Simferopol’s civilian international airport.

“I consider what has happened to be an armed invasion and occupation in violation of all international agreements and norms,” Avakov said on his Facebook page, describing it as a “provocation” and calling for talks.

This met with a Russian naval denial of involvement in the military airport action.

“No Black Sea Fleet units have moved toward (the airport), let alone taking any part in blockading it,” Interfax quoted a spokesman for the fleet as saying.

Near the military airport, half a dozen men in camouflage uniforms with automatic rifles were blocking the road using a truck with no licence plates.

Reporters were kept from approaching them by volunteer militia, who formed a second road block about 150m away.

“Of course they are Russian,” said Maxim Lovinetsky, 23, one of the volunteers who manned the post. “They came last night.”

Firebrand Russian nationalist Vladimir Zhirinovsky appeared in Sevastopol where a crowd outside the city administration gave him a hero’s welcome, shouting “Russia, thank you”.

“If the people have a right to rise up in a revolt and overthrow the authorities, why doesn’t Sevastopol have a right to do that?” he told them.

Although nominally part of the Russian opposition, he is widely seen as a servant of Kremlin policy, used to float radical opinions to test public reaction.

 

 

 

 

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