‘Kiev has turned to
terrorism’: Putin on foiled sabotage plot in Crimea
Published time: 10
Aug, 2016 15:27Edited time: 10 Aug, 2016 16:34
Russian President
Vladimir Putin. © Aleksey Nikolskyi / Sputnik
Kiev has turned to
the “practice of terrorism” instead of trying to peacefully resolve Ukraine’s
crisis, Russian President Vladimir Putin said in commenting on an FSB report
that it had foiled terrorist attacks in Crimea plotted by Ukrainian
intelligence.
Ukraine is “playing
a dangerous game,” the Russian leader said when talking to reporters on
Wednesday, while calling Kiev’s actions “stupid and criminal.”
Moscow cannot turn a
blind eye to the deaths of its servicemen who were killed during special
operations to prevent terrorist attacks in Crimea, Putin said.
Given that the Main
Directorate of Intelligence of the Ministry of Defense of Ukraine (HUR MOU) was
allegedly behind the thwarted terrorist attacks in Crimea, it is “pointless”
to meet with Ukraine’s current authorities to seek a solution to the country’s
crisis, Putin said.
The leaders of
Russia, Ukraine, France, and Germany were to meet in the so-called “Normandy
format” to discuss the peace process in Ukraine on the sidelines of the
upcoming G20 in China.
However, Kiev has
demonstrated that it’s not interested in peaceful negotiations, the Russian
president told reporters, adding that he would like to address the matter with
Moscow’s American and European partners as well.
“I think it’s
obvious that Kiev’s current authorities are not seeking for ways to solve
problems through negotiations, but have turned to terrorism,” Putin said,
adding that this new development is rather alarming.
Russia's Federal
Security Service (FSB) announced on Wednesday it had discovered a group of
infiltrators in Crimea close to the Ukrainian border. Explosive devices and
ammunition used by the Ukrainian Army’s special forces were discovered at the
scene, while more attempts by Ukrainian raiding and terrorist groups to break
through had been prevented by Russian forces this week, the FSB said.
Kiev refuted the FSB
report of a foiled terrorist plot, and instead accused Moscow of provocation.
Blaming the “escalation” on Russia, Ukraine’s permanent representative
to the Council of Europe, Dmytro Kuleba, said on Twitter that Moscow “tests
West’s reaction.”
Russian FSB foils terrorist attacks plotted by Ukrainian intel agents in Crimea
Russia’s Federal Security Service (FSB) has prevented terrorist attacks in Crimea that were planned by the Ukrainian Defense Ministry’s intelligence agency, the FSB said.
The Main Directorate of Intelligence of the Ministry of Defense of Ukraine (HUR MOU) was preparing to target the Russian peninsula’s critical infrastructure, the FSB announced on Wednesday.
The infiltrators also planned to blow up a highway in the region at the time motorcades with local officials and federal authorities would have been driving through it, Rossiyskaya Gazeta reported.
A group of infiltrators was discovered near the town of Armyansk in northern Crimea near the Ukrainian border in a special FSB operation over the weekend, the agency said, adding that fire was exchanged as the terrorists were being apprehended.
FSB received a warning from Armyansk locals, who had reported on some suspicious people in military uniforms in their town, Rossiyskaya Gazeta said. Having responded to the call, an FSB task group detected some 20 people in the area, who were loading explosives and weapons from their hideout. Once the suspects noticed the Russian security forces, they immediately opened fire, shooting to kill, the newspaper said.
One FSB officer was killed, while at least one infiltrator was shot dead and several others injured when the officers returned fire.
Twenty home-made explosive devices equivalent to more than 40 kilos of TNT, as well as ammunition, shells, and other weapons used by the Ukrainian Army’s special forces were discovered at the scene.
Two more attempts by Ukrainian raiding and terrorist groups to breakthrough were prevented by Russian forces on Monday. Kiev’s armored vehicles provided covering fire for the groups from the Ukrainian side, the FSB said, adding that one Russian serviceman had been killed in that operation.
The suspected Kiev agents attempted to cross the border through a swamped lake of Sivash, Rossiyskaya Gazeta explained, saying that all overland areas connecting the peninsula to the mainland are thoroughly guarded by Russian border officers.
A network of agents from Ukraine’s chief intelligence directorate has been uncovered in Crimea, according to the FSB, which said it included both Ukrainian and Russian citizens that provided assistance in preparing terrorist acts.
Those suspects employed by Ukrainian intelligence are now giving their confessions, the FSB reported, adding that the captured group includes one of the organizers.
A criminal case has been opened and additional covert and investigative activities are being conducted in the region.
The thwarted acts of sabotage and terrorism were aimed at destabilizing the social and political situation on the peninsula ahead of both local and federal elections, the FSB said in its statement.
Ukraine’s General Staff has said the reports of groups raiding Crimea are provocations.
A Ukrainian defense intelligence spokesman refuted the FSB report, telling Reuters that the information was “fake.”
Meanwhile, security in the region has been tightened due to the discovery, the FSB announced, saying that additional security arrangements have been made near major infrastructure objects, in crowded places, and on the Russian-Ukrainian border.
Last year, electricity supplies to Crimea were cut off after a group supposedly led by several Ukrainian politicians used explosives to down a pylon in Ukraine’s Kherson Region. Radicals from the extreme Right Sector Ukrainian nationalist group and representatives of Crimean Tatar nationalist organizations continuously blocked attempts to restore the power line.
About two million Crimean residents were left partially or completely without power, prompting the Crimean Republic's authorities to pass an address on to the United Nations, asking it to recognize Ukraine’s “energy blockade” of the peninsula as violation of basic Human Rights and genocide.
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