Los Angeles Times

Ukraine separatist­s’ dream is dissolving

With leader dead and Russia backing out, fighters appear stuck.

- By Mansur Mirovalev Mirovalev is a special correspond­ent.

KIEV, Ukraine — More than four years after they took up arms against the Ukrainian government and seized a southeaste­rn chunk of the country, pro-Russian separatist­s appear no closer to their dream of making their enclaves part of Russia.

The separatist territory — which includes the regions of Donetsk and Luhansk, known together as Donbass — is reeling from the assassinat­ion of Alexander Zakharchen­ko. The 42year-old “head of the People’s Republic of Donetsk” was killed with a bodyguard on Aug. 31 by a bomb hidden in a lamp at a restaurant there.

His death set off a battle for succession and a massive roundup of suspects who human rights advocates say have been detained and tortured.

The primary suspect, a second bodyguard, who owned the restaurant, has apparently fled. But the killing has also spurred speculatio­n that Moscow had become fed up with Zakharchen­ko and ordered the hit.

Russia backed the 2014 uprising and a pair of referendum­s in which Donbass voters overwhelmi­ngly endorsed a plan to break from Ukraine and become part of Russia. But the Kremlin now wants Donbass to remain part of Ukraine — but with greater autonomy.

The separatist revolt came in response to the growing power of pro-Western activists who succeeded in ousting Ukraine’s pro Russia president, Viktor Yanukovich, and securing passage of a new law restrictin­g the use of Russian, the main language in Donbass and other regions with large ethnic Russian minorities.

The rebels began seizing government offices in what they dubbed “the Russian Spring.” Hundreds of Russian volunteers, including far-right nationalis­ts and neo-Nazis, moved to Donbass and joined the separatist­s as pro-Kremlin media denounced Ukrainian “fascists.”

But more than 10,000 people were killed in the resulting war, most in that first year, and both Russian and local support for the separatist­s has waned as various separatist warlords competed for control of coal mining, factories, the food supply and humanitari­an aid from Russia and the West.

More than 2 million people have fled to central Ukraine or Russia.

No Western journalist­s have been allowed to visit Donbass since 2015, but former residents, human rights activists and Ukrainian officials described a deteriorat­ing security situation in which inhabitant­s face the constant threats of extortion and arbitrary detention by separatist police and shelling by Ukrainian forces.

Shootouts occur daily despite a 2014 cease-fire. Two peace deals known as the Minsk accords stipulated the withdrawal of heavy weaponry from the front line, internatio­nal monitoring and the release of hostages, but they remain largely ignored by the separatist­s and Ukrainian forces.

Many residents lack healthcare and live in houses that have been damaged by artillery and lack access to running water and electricit­y. The lucky ones work for the separatist authoritie­s and earn less than $100 a month. Others survive on potatoes.

On Sunday, three children were killed and one wounded by a landmine in the town of Horlivka, a separatist news agency reported.

Those casualties came a day after four people were wounded in an explosion at a Communist Party headquarte­rs in Donetsk.

And at least 117 people in the town of Makeevka were poisoned recently after magnesium was mistakenly used to treat tap water instead of chlorine, according to Donbass ombudsman Pavel Lisyansky.

For those who fled Donbass, each such news report is a reminder of what they lost because of the war.

“My heart aches every time I hear about Donetsk, because the separatist­s turned it into a new Gaza Strip,” said Valentin Koloborodo­v, a 47-year-old welder who left in 2014 with his wife and two teenage daughters and now lives in Kiev. Separatist­s took over their old apartment.

Koloborodo­v has returned to Donetsk twice a year to visit his 72-year-old aunt, enduring long lines at checkpoint­s, exhausting interrogat­ions and searches by Ukrainian military personnel and separatist­s.

But he said he’s stayed away since the assassinat­ion in August because the separatist­s “got paranoid after the blast.”

Immediatel­y after the killing, Zakharchen­ko’s deputy, Dmitry Trapezniko­v, took over as the head of Donetsk. But six days later, the separatist parliament known as the “People’s Council” replaced him with its speaker, Denis Pushilin, who promptly fired five ministers.

Trapezniko­v and the “income minister,” Alexander Timofeyev, who was badly wounded in the bombing, reportedly fled Donetsk.

They joined a long line of separatist­s who left the region after falling out with their comrades.

One of the first was Igor Strelkov, a veteran of the wars in Chechnya and Bosnia who served as Donetsk’s “defense minister” before abandoning his post and moving to Moscow in 2014. He never stopped hating Zakharchen­ko.

“I despised him too much during his lifetime to feel sorry about his death,” he wrote online early last month.

Zacharchen­ko is the latest of nearly a dozen separatist leaders and warlords gunned down, blown up or found hanged since 2014.

The bombing, which also wounded a dozen people at the restaurant, remains unsolved.

One theory advanced by the SBU, Ukraine’s main security agency, is that Zakharchen­ko’s killing was tied to his business interests — which include the export of coal and scrap metal to Russia, supermarke­ts and distributi­on of gas from Russia — and conflicts with other separatist­s over money.

In late September, the agency released what it said was a recorded conversati­on between an aide to Pushilin and other separatist­s discussing the assassinat­ion.

Other Ukrainian authoritie­s, including the Defense Ministry, have accused Russia of orchestrat­ing the killing.

The motive, according to one popular line of thinking, is that Russia had given up on Zakharchen­ko and wanted to offer up the region for reintegrat­ion into Ukraine in exchange for the lifting of Western sanctions aimed at halting its expansioni­sm there and in Crimea.

“Putin is clearing the way for the deployment of peacekeepe­rs,” said Ilya Ponomaryov, a Russian opposition leader. “He needs a more controlled figure at the helm.”

Russia, which opened an investigat­ion into what it called an “internatio­nal act of terrorism,” joined the separatist­s in blaming Ukraine, which denied any responsibi­lity for the killing.

 ?? Sega Volskii AFP/Getty Images ?? DMITRIY Vadimovich, 10, is in a hospital in Horlivka, north of Donetsk, after being injured by a landmine.
Sega Volskii AFP/Getty Images DMITRIY Vadimovich, 10, is in a hospital in Horlivka, north of Donetsk, after being injured by a landmine.

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