Edmonton Journal

Ukrainian air-force commander held in Crimea

- JIM HEINTZ

KYIV, Ukraine —A Ukrainian air force commander is being held after his base in Crimea was stormed by pro-Russian forces, and the acting president called for his release Sunday.

Col. Yuliy Mamchur is the commander of the Belbek Air Force base near Sevastopol, which was taken over Saturday by forces that sent armoured personnel carriers smashing through the base’s walls and fired shots and stun grenades. One Ukrainian serviceman was reported wounded in the clash.

It was unclear if the forces, who didn’t bear insignia, were Russian military or local pro-Russia militia.

Ukraine President Oleksandr Turchynov, in a statement, said Mamchur was “abducted” by the forces. He didn’t specify where Mamchur is believed to be held. However, prominent politician Vitali Klitschko said Sunday that Mamchur is being held by the Russian military in a jail in Sevastopol, the Crimean city that is the base of Russia’s Black Sea Fleet.

Klitschko was one of the leaders of the three months of protests in Ukraine that culminated in late February with president

Viktor Yanukovych fleeing the country and interim authoritie­s taking power before a May 25 presidenti­al election.

Yanukovych’s ouster was denounced by Russia and much of Ukraine’s ethnic Russian population as a coup. Soon thereafter, Russian forces took control of Crimea and the region held a referendum to break off from Ukraine and join Russia.

Russia formally annexed Crimea last week, a move that Western countries say is illegitima­te. The U.S. and the EU have imposed sanctions on Russia in the dispute, but Moscow appears unmoved. On Sunday, the Russian Defence Ministry said the Russian flag was now flying over 189 military facilities in Crimea.

It didn’t specify whether any Ukrainian military operations there remained under Ukrainian control.

 ?? ALEXEY KRAVTSOV/AFP/Getty Images ?? Pro-Russian protesters stage a rally in the centre of the Ukrainian city of Odessa on Sunday.
ALEXEY KRAVTSOV/AFP/Getty Images Pro-Russian protesters stage a rally in the centre of the Ukrainian city of Odessa on Sunday.

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