The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Kremlin warns of flare-up

Ukraine declares martial law in parts of the country

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The Kremlin warned Tuesday that a simmering war in eastern Ukraine could boil over after Russia seized three Ukrainian ships and Kyiv responded by declaring martial law in parts of the country. Russia paraded the captured seamen on television, a move that Ukraine called criminal.

Russia and Ukraine have blamed each other for Sunday’s confrontat­ion in the Kerch Strait, which links the Black Sea and the Sea of Azov.

The clash has raised the spectre of renewing a full-blown conflict in eastern Ukraine and saw Russia strongly criticized at the United Nations by the United States and its allies.

The Ukrainian parliament on Monday adopted a motion by the president to impose martial law for 30 days.

That is something Ukraine avoided doing even when Russia annexed its nearby Crimean peninsula in 2014 or sent in clandestin­e troops and weapons to insurgents in war-torn eastern Ukraine.

On Sunday near Crimea, Russian border guards rammed into and opened fire on three Ukrainian navy vessels travelling from the Black Sea toward a Ukrainian port.

The Russians seized the ships and their crews.

Ukraine considers the 24 captured men to be prisoners of war and says some have been seriously injured, while Russia says they are individual­s who have violated its border.

The Kremlin reacted strongly to Ukraine’s declaratio­n of martial law, with Dmitry Peskov, Russian President Vladimir Putin’s spokesman, telling reporters Tuesday that it might trigger a flare-up in hostilitie­s in eastern Ukraine.

Ukrainian troops have been fighting Russian-backed separatist­s in eastern Ukraine since 2014, a conflict that has left over 10,000 dead, but fighting has eased since a truce in

2015.

The martial law formally went into effect on Monday in several parts of Ukraine, including areas bordering territory now held by the separatist­s.

The Russian intelligen­ce agency FSB claimed the ships had Ukrainian SBU intelligen­ce agents onboard with a mission to mount what they called “provocatio­n” in the Kerch Strait.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? Ukrainian national guard soldiers and a police officer search a car at the checkpoint near the city of Mariupol, south coast of Azov sea, eastern Ukraine, Tuesday.
AP PHOTO Ukrainian national guard soldiers and a police officer search a car at the checkpoint near the city of Mariupol, south coast of Azov sea, eastern Ukraine, Tuesday.

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