In Ukraine Tensions pacified after 'coup' in separatist region
Tensions appeared to abate Thursday in Lugansk, a stronghold of
Russian-backed separatists in eastern Ukraine, two days after infighting
erupted in the war-scarred region, culminating in accusations of a coup
attempt.
The so-called Lugansk People's Republic, one
of two regions controlled by the rebels, has for years been blighted by
leadership squabbles and several senior leaders have been assassinated.
The
current conflict escalated on Tuesday, when hundreds of armed men in
military fatigues without insignia blocked access to government
buildings in what one of the soldiers described as military drills
ordered by the Lugansk interior ministry.
Patrols began after self-proclaimed Lugansk leader Igor Plotnitsky earlier this week sacked his interior minister, Igor Kornet, in an apparent spike in infighting between rebel factions.
Plotnitsky
then accused Kornet of masterminding a coup attempt, which the sacked
minister denied. But Kornet has so far refused to step down.
On
Thursday, the number of soldiers and military trucks in the city centre
had sharply decreased, as formerly blocked government buildings were
again accessible.
Military vehicles were moved from the streets and parked in backyards, AFP journalists saw.
"This is not a coup, we simply need to lead people on the right track," one of the armed, pro-Kornet men who identified himself as "Varyag" told AFP.
Kornet's men on Wednesday had arrested a top local prosecutor loyal to Plotnitsky, along with several of his deputies.
"We just cleaned up the streets because some leaders are becoming too capricious and think they control the world," Varyag said.
The
headquarters of the local television, headed by a relative of
Plotnitsky, remained surrounded by armed men, while Plotnitsky's
official website reported it had been subject to "repeated
cyberattacks".
Plotnitsky's whereabouts were unknown Thursday, but some Russian media reported he had left Lugansk and fled to Russia.
Russian President Vladimir Putin's spokesman Dmitry Peskov said the Kremlin was aware of the situation, but declined further comment.
A
conflict between Russia-backed fighters and Ukrainian troops has killed
more than 10,000 people since 2014, when pro-Russian forces declared
parts of eastern Ukraine independent following Moscow's annexation of
Crimea.
Kiev and the West accuse Russia of plotting and backing the insurgency, which Moscow denies.
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