The Star Malaysia

Thousands evacuated after Ukraine arms depot ‘sabotaged’

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KalynivKa: Ukrainian authoritie­s evacuated more than 30,000 people from the central Vinnytsya region after a huge arms depot caught fire and set off explosions in what prosecutor­s said was a possible act of “sabotage”.

It was the second major incident affecting a Ukrainian weapons storage site this year.

Kiev blamed the first one in March on Moscow and its Russianbac­ked insurgents fighting Ukrainian forces in the warwrecked east – a charge both sides denied.

The pro-Western former Soviet nation’s military prosecutor’s office said yesterday that it was opening an investigat­ion into possible “sabotage at a military facility”.

Immediate reports mentioned no fatalities and only two minor injuries from the blasts.

An AFP reporter at the scene said blasts in the town of Kalynivka in the Vinnytsya region located some 175km southwest of the capital Kiev could be heard every five seconds yesterday morning and that the streets of the town of 20,000 were nearly deserted.

“People suffered heavy damage,” a local resident who agreed to iden- tify herself only as Antonina said.

“Some homes had their windows and doors completely blown out,” she said.

President Petro Poroshenko underscore­d the seriousnes­s of the situation by telling his top military brass and Prime Minister Volodymyr Groysman to report to him directly after visiting the site.

“This is the arsenal of the Ukrainian army, and I think it was no accident that it was destroyed,” Groysman said in televised remarks from the site.

The army’s high command wrote on Facebook that the fire broke out at around 10pm on Tuesday.

Police spokesman Yaroslav Trakalo told the Pravda news outlet the flames caused artillery shells at the facility to explode one after the other.

The national police said more than 30,000 people had been evacuated from areas immediatel­y surroundin­g the military site.

“In addition, 180 patients were evacuated from Vinnytsia area hospitals,” Ukraine’s emergency ministry said.

The extent of the damage was not clear but media described the depot as one of the country’s largest.

Officials also closed off the surroundin­g airspace to air traffic as a precaution.

“Airspace has been closed in a radius of 50km around the area of the fire,” Deputy Infrastruc­ture Minister Yuriy Lavrenyuk wrote on Facebook.

The last major arms depot fire killed one person in the eastern town of Balakliya in March.

Authoritie­s at the time pointed the finger at Moscow and Russianbac­ked insurgents fighting Ukrainian troops in the eastern rustbelt in a war that broke out in April 2014 and has claimed more than 10,000 lives.

Some officials in Kiev then mooted the possibilit­y that the fire was caused by explosives dropped from a drone.

Both the Russian-backed forces and the insurgents dismissed the charge outright.

Russia vehemently denies plotting and backing Ukraine’s eastern conflict and refers to the fighting as a “civil war”. — AFP

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 ??  ?? Wrecked ride: An official examining a damaged car after the munitions depot caught fire and set off explosions. — AFP
Wrecked ride: An official examining a damaged car after the munitions depot caught fire and set off explosions. — AFP

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