The Borneo Post

Gunman arrested, hostages freed after Ukraine president’s call

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LUTSK, Ukraine: Ukrainian police freed 13 hostages and arrested an armed man who held them on a bus for more than 12 hours on Tuesday, after the country’s president agreed to his demand to post a movie recommenda­tion on social media.

The SBU security service said a joint operation had resulted in all the hostages being released unharmed after a police standoff in the western city Lutsk with the man, who threatened to detonate an explosive device unless his strange requests were met.

The tense hostage situation seemed to be resolved swiftly after the man spoke on the phone with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, who then recorded a short video, apparently meeting one of the man’s demands.

Three hostages were quickly let go, followed by the rest about an hour later.

Footage published by Ukrainian officials showed police escorting people as armed special forces stood over a man lying face down on the pavement near the bus with his hands behind his back.

The hostage-taker had earlier fired shots and thrown an explosive package into the street in the centre of Lutsk, a city of over 200,000 some 400 kilometres from capital Kiev.

The man initially made contact with the police identifyin­g himself as Maksym Plokhoy, a pseudonym which translates to “Bad Maxim”, police said.

He was identified as Maksym Kryvosh, 44, who had previously spent around 10 years in prison on various charges.

An account which was later suspended by Twitter had posts under Kryvosh’s name claiming he was armed, including with bombs, and demanding top Ukrainian personalit­ies convey anti-establishm­ent messages on social media.

President Zelensky apparently carried out one of the demands posted on the account when he recorded a Facebook video calling on people to watch the 2005 documentar­y film “Earthlings”. Narrated by Joaquin Phoenix, the film chronicles the harsh treatment of animals at the hands of humans.

Zelensky spoke with Kryvosh after a phone was handed to him, deputy head of Zelensky’s administra­tion Kyrylo Tymoshenko told a briefing in Lutsk.

“He had a telephone conversati­on, speaking with him for 15 minutes, he convinced him to release three hostages,” Tymoshenko said.

Interior Minister Arsen Avakov said Kryvosh came out of the bus following the negotiatio­ns. “He really had a functionin­g pistol, an automatic rifle, he really had a grenade. There was a threat. But it’s all in the past,” Avakov said.

“A lengthy prison sentence awaits him,” he said, calling Kryvosh an “unstable man”.

Earlier footage showed the blue and white bus with several windows shattered and curtains drawn, surrounded by a heavy police presence. — AFP

He had a telephone conversati­on, speaking with him for 15 minutes, he convinced him to release three hostages. Kyrylo Tymoshenko

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 ?? — AFP photo ?? A suspected hostage-taker lies on the ground after being detained by police in the city of Lutsk, some 400 kilometres from the capital Kiev.
— AFP photo A suspected hostage-taker lies on the ground after being detained by police in the city of Lutsk, some 400 kilometres from the capital Kiev.

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