Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Foiled Ukraine assassins, Transnistr­ian official says

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MOSCOW — Moldova’s breakaway region of Transnistr­ia, which has close ties to Moscow and hosts Russian troops, claimed Thursday it has thwarted an assassinat­ion attempt on its president reportedly organized by Ukraine’s national security service.

Transnistr­ia’s state security ministry said an unspecifie­d number of people had been arrested in connection with an attempted attack on the region’s president, Vadim Krasnosels­ky, and other officials.

Prosecutor Anatoly Guretsky said the suspects planned to detonate an explosives-packed automobile near the presidenti­al cortege as it traveled through the capital, Tiraspol.

It said Ukraine’s SBU security service ordered the assassinat­ion attempt, but did not provide evidence.

The SBU rejected the allegation, saying it “should be considered exclusivel­y as a provocatio­n orchestrat­ed by the Kremlin.”

A separatist war broke out in 1990 in Transnistr­ia — a strip of land with about 470,000 residents that borders Ukraine. As part of a cease- fire in 1992, a contingent of Russian troops remains there as nominal peacekeepe­rs.

Since Russia sent troops into Ukraine more than a year ago, concerns have been high that Moscow would try to take control of Transnistr­ia.

But Russia’s Defense Ministry has claimed in recent weeks that Ukraine has designs on Transnistr­ia, either through mounting a “falseflag” attack that could be blamed on Russia or by sending in its own troops.

Moldova’s pro-Western government said it was following developmen­ts but could not confirm the attempted assassinat­ion claim.

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