Los Angeles Times

Ukrainian separatist leader killed

- By Sabra Ayres sabra.ayres@latimes.com Ayres is a special correspond­ent.

MOSCOW — The leader of a Ukrainian separatist rebel group backed by Russia was killed in an explosion Friday along with his bodyguard, and at least 12 others were wounded, the health minister of Ukraine’s splinter Donetsk region said Saturday.

Alexander Zakharchen­ko, 42, the separatist leader of the self-proclaimed Donetsk People’s Republic, died as a result of the explosion at a cafe in the eastern city of Donetsk, the Interfax Russian news service reported Friday. The official rebel news agency confirmed the death.

Under the title of prime minister, Zakharchen­ko headed the breakaway Ukrainian region at the center of an ongoing war between Ukrainian government troops and Kremlinbac­ked separatist militias.

“Unfortunat­ely, the head of the Donetsk People’s Republic, Alexander Zakharchen­ko, has died as a result of the terrorist act,” said Donetsk News Agency, the rebel media website, quoting a statement from the administra­tion of the rebel government.

On Saturday, Health Minister Alexander Oprishchen­ko announced the death of the bodyguard, and said 12 others were wounded.

The Associated Press reported Saturday that the killings have led to increased tensions and worry by separatist­s that Ukraine is preparing to launch a new offensive against the rebels.

The explosion took place in the late afternoon at a cafe called Separatist in Donetsk’s central, tree-lined Pushkin Boulevard, Russian media reported.

Zakharchen­ko rose to power in the separatist militia first as a commander in the early days of the Moscow-supported rebels’ fight against Ukraine’s government forces in 2014. The separatist­s declared their own republic in the industrial­ized and coal-rich eastern Ukrainian regions of Donetsk and Luhansk in March 2014.

The events followed a popular street movement in the Ukrainian capital, Kiev, that led to the ouster of a Moscow-favored president and Russia’s annexation of Crimea in February 2014.

Ukrainian government troops have been fighting the separatist troops, who are aided and supported by the Kremlin, in a four-year war that has claimed more than 10,000 lives and displaced 1.2 million Ukrainians. The Kremlin has denied sending troops to support the rebel militias and claims the fighting is a civil war that erupted after an illegal power grab in Kiev.

The separatist government­s said they want independen­ce from Ukraine and closer ties with Russia, while the Ukrainian government has signed an associatio­n and trade agreement with the European Union.

The United States has sent military trainers to support the Ukrainian government troops and supplied them with antitank missiles, a move that has irritated Russia.

Zakharchen­ko, a former mining engineer, was elected prime minister of the rebel government in November 2014. He later became the rebel territory’s representa­tive in the Minsk peace talks, an ongoing peace negotiatio­n involving Russia, several European nations, Ukraine and the rebel-held territorie­s. The talks have failed to resolve the ongoing conflict in eastern Ukraine.

The law enforcemen­t agencies in the rebel territory said they had detained “Ukrainian saboteurs” suspected in Zakharchen­ko’s assassinat­ion, Interfax reported a source from the rebel government as saying.

 ?? Alexander Ermochenko EPA/Shuttersto­ck ?? POLICE investigat­e the scene of an explosion that left two dead and 12 wounded at a cafe called Separatist in Donetsk, Ukraine.
Alexander Ermochenko EPA/Shuttersto­ck POLICE investigat­e the scene of an explosion that left two dead and 12 wounded at a cafe called Separatist in Donetsk, Ukraine.
 ?? Sergei Grits Associated Press ?? THE BLAST killed Alexander Zakharchen­ko, a Kremlin-backed leader.
Sergei Grits Associated Press THE BLAST killed Alexander Zakharchen­ko, a Kremlin-backed leader.

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