UKRAINIAN SEPARATIST LEADER KILLED IN BOMB BLAST AT CAFE
▶ Assassination of Alexander Zakharchenko could pitch Ukraine and rebel forces back into widespread conflict
The leader of the breakaway Donetsk region of Ukraine was killed in an explosion on Friday, in an assassination that could reignite a conflict that has soured relations between Russia and the West.
Alexander Zakharchenko, leader of the Donetsk People’s Republic (DNR), died after a blast at the separatist-themed Separ cafe in central Donetsk.
Zakharchenko is the most prominent rebel to have been killed in the four-year war between Kremlin-backed separatists and Ukrainian government forces.
His bodyguard was also killed, while the region’s finance minister was seriously injured.
Russia’s Foreign Ministry believes that Kiev is responsible, and President Vladimir Putin has warned that Zakharchenko’s death could further destabilise the region.
The rebellion in the southeast regions of Donetsk and Luhansk, known collectively as the Donbass, came after pro-Russian Ukrainian president Viktor Yanukovych left office in February 2014 amid mass protests.
Moscow provided covert military and financial support for the separatists in the Donbass, where Russian speakers predominate.
Zakharchenko, 42, was named prime minister of the DNR in November 2014. The former coal mine electrician and businessman rose rapidly as a rebel leader. He was wounded in combat and surviving a car bomb blast in 2014.
Unlike the Crimean Peninsula, Russia has not annexed the breakaway Donetsk and Luhansk regions. Zakharchenko said it was his ambition to build “a new state” but the DNR remains unrecognised.
The leaders of Russia and Ukraine, along with Germany and France, signed a ceasefire in Minsk, Belarus in 2015 to end the conflict in which more than 10,000 people have died and more than 1.5 million have been displaced.
But since then the agreement’s provisions have remained unfulfilled, with regular clashes in which each side accuses the other of breaching the ceasefire.
Assassinations have played an increasing role in the conflict. Former Luhansk leader Igor Plotnitsky was severely injured in 2016 when his car exploded.
In the same year, Arsen Pavlov, the separatist leader known as “Motorola”, died in an explosion in the lift of his apartment building.
In February last year rebel leader “Givi”, Mikhail Tolstykh, was killed when a rocket was fired into his office.
Russian officials blame Ukraine for these assassinations but Kiev denies this.
The separatists have also been dogged by internal discord, with several previous leaders forced to flee the region.
Mr Putin called Zakharchenko “a true people’s leader, a brave and resolute man”. He attributed his death to terrorism but fell short of directly blaming Kiev.
Earlier, Russia’s Foreign Ministry was more direct, with spokeswoman Maria Zakharova saying: “Instead of fulfilling the Minsk accords and finding ways to resolve the internal conflict, the Kiev war party is implementing a terrorist scenario.
“Having failed to fulfill the promise of peace, apparently they decided to turn to a bloodbath.”
Ukrainian security service chief Igor Guskov said Zakharchenko’s death could have been the result of infighting or the work of Russian spies.
“We don’t exclude that this was an effort by Russian intelligence agencies to eliminate a rather odious figure who, according to our information, was getting in the Russians’ way,” Mr Guskov told Ukraine’s 112 channel.
“According to our information, either the rebels or Russian intelligence agencies were behind this blast.”