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Ukraine crisis: Pro-Russian rebels take strategic port of Novoazovsk on the Azov Sea

Move raises fears the separatists are seeking to create a land link between Russia and Crimea

Peter Leonard
Thursday 28 August 2014 07:16 EDT
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Local residents watch as smoke rises, during shelling, in the town of Novoazovsk, eastern Ukraine
Local residents watch as smoke rises, during shelling, in the town of Novoazovsk, eastern Ukraine (AP)

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Pro-Russian rebel forces entered a key town in south-eastern Ukraine today after three days of heavy shelling, the town’s mayor said, capturing new territory far from most of their battles with government troops.

The town of Novoazovsk lies in a strategically significant location – on the Azov Sea and on the road linking Russia to the Russian-annexed Crimean Peninsula. It was the first time in the four-month-long conflict that fighting has reached as far south as the coast and suggests that the rebels, who Ukraine says are being supported by Russia, are emboldened and reinforced.

The new south-eastern front has raised fears the separatists are seeking to create a land link between Russia and Crimea. If so, that could also give the rebels or Russia control over the entire Azov Sea and any oil or mineral riches it contains.

The Mayor Oleg Sidorkin said that rebels had entered the town. There were no details on the size of the rebel force. Earlier, more than 20 shells were fired in one hour at Novoazovsk. Plumes of black smoke rose above the town, which was also hit repeatedly by shelling on Tuesday that damaged a hospital and wounded four people inside, Mr Sidorkin said.

Security officials said villages around Novoazovsk have also come under shelling. The assault on the town has forced government troops to spread their ranks thinner along the Russian border.

“Novoazovsk is being shelled both from Russia and from positions on Ukrainian territory,” a Ukrainian National Security Council spokesman Colonel Andriy Lysenko told reporters.

Mr Sidorkin said the rebel forces were positioned near the southernmost border with Russia. It was not clear how the rebels could travel to the area, which is distant from the front line further north. Fighters could have easily come over the Russian border, however.

Artillery shells in Novoazovsk appear to be flying between positions held by rebels and by government forces. “It hit a tree, there was a blast and the shrapnel came down here,” said Alexei Podlepentsov, an electrician at the hospital.

AP

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