Ukrainian
forces killed up to five pro-Moscow separatists in the east of the country,
the Interior Ministry said on Thursday, as Russian President Vladimir Putin
warned of "consequences" if Kiev
used the army against its own people.
Interior Ministry forces backed by the army removed
three checkpoints manned by armed groups in the separatist-controlled town of
Slaviansk,
the ministry said in a statement.
"During the armed clash up to five terrorists were
eliminated," it said, adding that one person had been wounded on the
side of government forces.
Under an international accord signed in Geneva last
week, illegal armed groups, including the rebels occupying about a dozen
public buildings in the largely Russian-speaking east, are supposed to disarm
and go home.
However, the Kremlin, which has deployed tens of
thousands of troops on Ukraine's
border, maintains it has the right to protect Russian-speakers if they come under
threat, a reason it gave for annexing the Crimean peninsula from Ukraine last
month.
In St Petersburg, Putin
said that if the authorities in Kiev had used
the army in eastern Ukraine,
this would be a very serious crime against its own people.
"It is just a punitive operation and it will of
course incur consequences for the people making these decisions, including
(an effect) on our interstate relations," Putin said in a televised
meeting with regional media.
The Geneva agreement,
signed by Russia, the United States, Ukraine
and the European Union, is already in trouble as Kiev launches its offensive to regain
control of the east.
East and West have put the onus on each other to ensure
the accord is implemented on the ground. U.S. President Barack Obama said
earlier he was poised to impose new sanctions on Moscow if it did not act fast to end the
armed stand-off.
Moscow also flexed
its economic muscles in its worst stand-off with the West since the Cold War,
with the government suggesting foreign firms which pull out of the country
may not be able to get back in, and a source at Gazprom saying the gas
exporter had slapped an additional $11.4 billion bill on Kiev.
Washington accuses Moscow of fomenting
unrest in the east. Russia
denies this and counters that Europe and the United
States are supporting an illegitimate government in Kiev.
Obama said the Russian leadership was not abiding by
the spirit or the letter of the Geneva
agreement so far.
"We have prepared for the possibility of applying
additional sanctions," he told a news conference on a visit to Japan.
"There's always the possibility that Russia, tomorrow, or the next
day, reverses its course and takes a different approach."
U.S. TROOPS
ARRIVE IN POLAND
So far, the United States
and EU have imposed visa bans and asset freezes on a few Russians in protest
at Moscow's annexation last month of Crimea
from Ukraine.
In NATO member Poland,
the first group of a contingent of around 600 U.S. soldiers arrived on
Wednesday. They are part of an effort by Washington
to reassure eastern European allies who are worried by the build-up of
Russian forces near Ukraine's
borders.
Earlier on Thursday, Kiev forces with five light armored
vehicles took control of a checkpoint north of Slaviansk after separatists
appeared to abandon the position, Reuters journalists said from the scene.
The government said the city hall in another eastern
town, Mariupol, which had been seized by separatists, was now back under
central control. Interior Minister Arsen Avakov said the mayor was back in
his office.
"In this instance there were no casualties ... The
process of getting the situation back to normal in the city will
continue," he said in a post on his Facebook page.
Kiev also
reported a shootout overnight in another part of the east when a Ukrainian
soldier was wounded, while pro-Russian separatists in Slaviansk were holding
three journalists, including U.S.
citizen Simon Ostrovsky.
Ukraine, a former
Soviet republic, slid into unrest late last year when Moscow-backed President
Viktor Yanukovich rejected a pact to build closer ties with Europe.
Protesters took over central Kiev
and he fled in February.
Days later, Russian troops seized control of Crimea. Moscow
then annexed the region, saying it was protecting Russian residents, while
the West called the action a land grab.
The focus has now shifted to eastern Ukraine, the
industrial heartland and home to a large Russian-speaking community.
NO WAY BACK?
With rhetoric building from the United States about the imposition of a new,
tougher round of sanctions, Russia
suggested on Thursday that Western firms which pulled out of the country may
not be able to get back in.
"It is obvious that they won't return in the near
future if they sever investment agreements with us, I mean there are
consequences as well," Natural Resources Minister Sergei Donskoy told
reporters.
"Russia
is one of the most promising countries in terms of hydrocarbons production.
If some contracts are severed here, then, colleagues, you lose a serious lump
of your future pie," the minister added.
However, Western oil majors BP and Royal Dutch Shell
were sticking with their projects in Russia, he noted.
Supplies of Russian gas to Europe are also,
potentially, at risk from the crisis over Ukraine. Moscow
has threatened to cut Kiev
off unless it pays off its debts, and drastically raised this bill this week.
State-controlled Gazprom sent Ukrainian energy firm
Naftogaz an additional bill on Wednesday of $11.4 billion, more than five
times its previous claim, a source at the company said. This was in addition
to the $2.2 billion that Naftogaz already owes for supplies in 2013 and 2014
so far.
Moscow nearly
doubled the gas price for Ukraine
from April but Kiev,
which is in financial trouble, is refusing to pay.
If Moscow cuts off the
flow to Kiev, this would have a knock-on
effect on European customers further West, because many of the pipelines that
deliver their gas run through Ukraine.
European and Ukrainian officials were to meet in Slovakia, which borders Ukraine, on Thursday to try to work out ways
to mitigate the impact if Ukraine
is cut off.
The options include reversing the usual east-west flow
of the pipelines to Europe to pump gas back into Ukraine,
but the volumes that could be supplied this way would be only a small
fraction of the amount that Ukraine
needs.
Unarmed mediators from the Organization for Security
and Cooperation in Europe are in eastern Ukraine
trying to persuade pro-Russian gunmen to go home, in line with the Geneva accord.
Reuters reporters have not been able to establish that
any Russian troops or special forces members are in the region, though Kiev and Western powers say they have growing evidence
that Moscow
has a covert presence.
Putin has
described as "nonsense" allegations that Moscow
has its forces in eastern Ukraine.
It says the unrest is a spontaneous protest by local people who fear
persecution from the government in Kiev
which it says is illegitimate and has far-right links.
Reuters
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