Donetsk On Back-to-School Day
An injured man arrives on a stretcher at hospital after a shelling in Donetsk, eastern Ukraine on October 1, 2014
Ukraine's largest rebel-controlled city of Donetsk was rocked by shelling Wednesday as 10 people were killed, some of them teachers and parents showing up for the first day of school.
Terrified children were forced to shelter in the basement as the attacks yielded the highest daily civilian toll since a tenuous ceasefire was struck between Kiev and pro-Russian separatists last month.
Since then there have been clashes at several flashpoints around the region, with both sides blaming the other for violating the agreement that commits both to withdrawing weapons and establishing a buffer zone.
The United States has decried the violence while the European Union decided Tuesday to keep Russian sanctions in place, maintaining pressure on Moscow in what has become the worst East-West standoff since the Cold War.
European Commission chief Jose Manuel Barroso also warned Russian President Vladimir Putin against introducing any new trade barriers against Kiev in a letter to the Russian leader.
The pro-Kiev regional government of Donetsk, which is now based in the government-controlled city of Mariupol, accused pro-Russian separatists of the "Donetsk People's Republic" of shelling the school.
"The Donetsk People's Republic used rocket launchers to shoot at a school... the shell exploded five metres away from the building," the regional administration said in a statement.
Four adults were killed, it said.
Russian media and separatist websites showed footage of rebels launching attacks from positions in apartment buildings near Donetsk airport, which is still controlled by government troops. It lies about four kilometres (2.5 miles) from the school.
A source in Donetsk city hall told AFP that the strike happened right after the school's 70 pupils lined up for an assembly to mark the first day of class -- held nationally on September 1 but pushed back by rebel authorities because of the conflict.
"The children were taken to the basement, they are still there," the source said.
Six more people died when another shell struck a public minibus in Donetsk, the regional authorities said.
The United States earlier decried the "intensifying violence" in eastern Ukraine and called on Russia and the rebels to hold fire.
"Since the ceasefire was signed... attacks on Ukrainian positions and towns, including around the Donetsk airport... have killed and wounded scores of Ukrainian armed forces and civilians," State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki said.
"We call on Russia and the separatists it backs to immediately end these attacks."
She also called on Russia, which Kiev and the West blame for stirring the conflict, to withdraw all forces and equipment from the country.
Some Russian officers have however been working with Kiev since the weekend as part of a monitoring group.
Military spokesman Andriy Lysenko said that monitors, comprised of representatives from the Russian and Ukrainian militaries as well as the Organisation for the Security and Cooperation in Europe, have begun to patrol regions most frequently hit by ceasefire violations.
"Today the monitoring mission has begun work," he said of several groups consisting of six Russian officers, six Ukrainians and three to four representatives of the OSCE.
"They have begun patrols," he told journalists.
A delegation of about 70 Russian military officers arrived in the region at the weekend to discuss with both the rebels and the Ukrainians how to implement a lasting ceasefire.
With the toll climbing to 68 since the truce deal was struck on September 5, Ukraine on Wednesday officially started its election season ahead of snap parliamentary polls on October 26.
Ukraine's central election commission said that nearly 3,500 candidates have registered for the election, more than a third of them as independents.
The commission has also registered 29 parties, it said in a statement after the registration deadline passed at midnight.
Kiev is keen on also holding the vote in the regions to build legitimacy and regain the trust of Russian-speaking territories.
However the separatists of Lugansk and Donetsk have vowed to boycott the polls and hold a vote of their own on November 2 for the regional leaders and legislative bodies. http://aitonline.tv/post-ten_killed_in_ukraine_s_donetsk_on_back_to_school_day#sthash.Zs6syixy.dpuf
Ten Killed In Ukraine's Donetsk On Back-to-School Day
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An injured man arrives on a stretcher at hospital after a shelling in Donetsk, eastern Ukraine on October 1, 2014
- See more at: http://aitonline.tv/post-ten_killed_in_ukraine_s_donetsk_on_back_to_school_day#sthash.Zs6syixy.dpuf
Ukraine's
largest rebel-controlled city of Donetsk was rocked by shelling
Wednesday as 10 people were killed, some of them teachers and parents
showing up for the first day of school.
Terrified
children were forced to shelter in the basement as the attacks yielded
the highest daily civilian toll since a tenuous ceasefire was struck
between Kiev and pro-Russian separatists last month.
Since
then there have been clashes at several flashpoints around the region,
with both sides blaming the other for violating the agreement that
commits both to withdrawing weapons and establishing a buffer zone.
The
United States has decried the violence while the European Union decided
Tuesday to keep Russian sanctions in place, maintaining pressure on
Moscow in what has become the worst East-West standoff since the Cold
War.
European
Commission chief Jose Manuel Barroso also warned Russian President
Vladimir Putin against introducing any new trade barriers against Kiev
in a letter to the Russian leader.
The
pro-Kiev regional government of Donetsk, which is now based in the
government-controlled city of Mariupol, accused pro-Russian separatists
of the "Donetsk People's Republic" of shelling the school.
"The
Donetsk People's Republic used rocket launchers to shoot at a school...
the shell exploded five metres away from the building," the regional
administration said in a statement.
Four adults were killed, it said.
Russian
media and separatist websites showed footage of rebels launching
attacks from positions in apartment buildings near Donetsk airport,
which is still controlled by government troops. It lies about four
kilometres (2.5 miles) from the school.
A
source in Donetsk city hall told AFP that the strike happened right
after the school's 70 pupils lined up for an assembly to mark the first
day of class -- held nationally on September 1 but pushed back by rebel
authorities because of the conflict.
"The children were taken to the basement, they are still there," the source said.
Six more people died when another shell struck a public minibus in Donetsk, the regional authorities said.
The
United States earlier decried the "intensifying violence" in eastern
Ukraine and called on Russia and the rebels to hold fire.
"Since
the ceasefire was signed... attacks on Ukrainian positions and towns,
including around the Donetsk airport... have killed and wounded scores
of Ukrainian armed forces and civilians," State Department spokeswoman
Jen Psaki said.
"We call on Russia and the separatists it backs to immediately end these attacks."
She
also called on Russia, which Kiev and the West blame for stirring the
conflict, to withdraw all forces and equipment from the country.
Some Russian officers have however been working with Kiev since the weekend as part of a monitoring group.
Military
spokesman Andriy Lysenko said that monitors, comprised of
representatives from the Russian and Ukrainian militaries as well as the
Organisation for the Security and Cooperation in Europe, have begun to
patrol regions most frequently hit by ceasefire violations.
"Today
the monitoring mission has begun work," he said of several groups
consisting of six Russian officers, six Ukrainians and three to four
representatives of the OSCE.
"They have begun patrols," he told journalists.
A
delegation of about 70 Russian military officers arrived in the region
at the weekend to discuss with both the rebels and the Ukrainians how to
implement a lasting ceasefire.
With
the toll climbing to 68 since the truce deal was struck on September 5,
Ukraine on Wednesday officially started its election season ahead of
snap parliamentary polls on October 26.
Ukraine's
central election commission said that nearly 3,500 candidates have
registered for the election, more than a third of them as independents.
The commission has also registered 29 parties, it said in a statement after the registration deadline passed at midnight.
Kiev is keen on also holding the vote in the regions to build legitimacy and regain the trust of Russian-speaking territories.
However
the separatists of Lugansk and Donetsk have vowed to boycott the polls
and hold a vote of their own on November 2 for the regional leaders and
legislative bodies.
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