28/02/2014 09:17
Armed men seize Crimea parliament
Unidentified armed men apparently seeking closer ties with Russia on Thursday seized the parliament in the Crimean Peninsula in southern Ukraine, RIA Novosti reported.
The occupation comes a day after crowds of Crimean Tatars scuffled outside the building with pro-Russians, who have said they reject the rule of the leadership that has taken over the country since President Viktor Yanukovych was ousted over the weekend. The local Muslim Tatar population largely supports the incoming government in Kiev.
“We came to work but we can’t get inside the parliament. The building is surrounded by police … we were told that the building has been seized,” a spokesperson for the parliament said.
A Russian flag was reportedly hoisted by pro-Russian self-defense squads that stormed the building in the regional capital, Simferopol. The squads have been forming in predominantly ethnic Russian Crimea since Yanukovych was toppled.
The offices of Crimea’s Cabinet were also reportedly been seized overnight. Footage from the parliament showed Thursday that small barricades had been erected outside the building.
Crimean Prime Minister Anatoly Mogilev said he conducted negotiations with the men inside the parliament, but said he was told the group does not have the authority to put forward demands, according to a statement on the Crimean government website.
Police had set up a cordon around the parliament and the men inside were allowing deputies to enter and exit.
Ukraine’s acting Interior Minister confirmed the seizure by men with automatic weapons and machine guns in a Facebook post Thursday.
“The alarm has been raised among Interior Ministry troops and the police,” he said. “Measures have been taken to… prevent the situation developing into an armed confrontation in the center of the city.”
Prosecutors in Ukraine said in a statement that they had opened a terrorism case regarding the storming.