Pro-Russia rebels attempted to seize a key airport in eastern Ukraine
on Friday despite fierce resistance from government forces.
An Associated Press reporter saw three rebel tanks firing their
cannons at the main terminal of Donetsk airport, where government forces
are holed up. Sniper shots rang out around the area.
Rebels have made some gains in the area near the airport, seizing
some buildings on its fringes and using them to target the main
terminal.
Ukraine’s national security and defence council spokesman Col Andriy
Lysenko said two servicemen had been killed and another nine wounded
since Thursday. He said Ukrainian forces at the airport had undergone
rotation and firmly stood their ground.
The airport, located just north of Donetsk, the largest city in the
east, gives the Ukrainian forces a convenient vantage point to target
rebel positions. Its loss would be a major blow to Ukraine and would
also allow the rebels to receive large cargo planes with supplies in
addition to truck convoys from Russia.
Fighting for the airport has intensified this week, threatening to
derail the truce declared on 5 September. A follow-up deal which called
for both parties to pull back their artillery to create a buffer zone
hasn’t been implemented.
Kiev and the west have asserted that Moscow is fuelling the
separatist insurgency in eastern Ukraine by providing arms and
personnel, something Russia denies. Ukraine’s ambassador to the United
Nations, Yuriy Sergeyev, told reporters on Friday that “it is evident
that Russia demonstrates little resolve to fully comply with obligations
under the Minsk arrangements.”
He said the failure to follow the agreement “would be absolutely disastrous”.
Sergeyev said Russia still regularly shells Ukrainian military and civilian areas.
“So far, positions of the Ukrainian Armed Forces have been shelled
about 800 times,” he said. “As a result of these attacks, about 40
Ukrainian servicemen were killed and about 200 wounded.”
At least a dozen civilians have been killed since the ceasefire, he added.
Residential areas in Donetsk have been caught in the crossfire. A Red
Cross worker died on Thursday when a shell landed near the group’s
office in the city.
The rebels said the shelling came from the Ukrainian side, while the
Ukrainian foreign minister Pavlo Klimkin blamed the death on
“terrorists”.
A spokesman for the UN secretary-general, Ban Ki-moon, issued a
statement saying the aid worker’s death, along with the shelling of a
school that killed three people earlier this week, “underscore the
fragility of the current ceasefire and the importance of ensuring a
secure environment in south-eastern Ukraine that will allow humanitarian
actors to carry out their work and deliver critical assistance to those
most in need.”
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