#1 Ukraine rebel-held Donetsk sees 'heavy fighting'
Posted: Tue Aug 05, 2014 9:29 pm
BBC
The sooner this is over the better. That said I doubt Putin would be insane enough to invade the Ukraine. While yes, NATO forces would not pour in to fight him, if he did so, he could expect massive economic action at a time when the Russian economy is not very robust. Additionally you would and could expect to see NATO forces funneling in equipment and training in order to bleed the Russian Army. I'm very sure that both Americans and Poles just for example would be gleefully embrace the idea of making the Russians bleed for once.Heavy fighting has erupted in a suburb of the rebel stronghold of Donetsk, in eastern Ukraine, local officials say.
There are reports of civilian casualties as government forces battle to retake the city from pro-Russia separatists, the city council said.
Reports say powerful blasts and shooting were heard in the city.
Ukrainian government forces have made steady gains in recent weeks, encircling Donetsk and another rebel stronghold, Luhansk.
Power cuts
"As of 17:00 (14:00 GMT), there are active military hostilities going on in the Petrovksy district of Donetsk," Donetsk city council said on Tuesday, quoted by Ukraine's Unian news agency.
Electricity has been cut in some parts of the district after shells hit substations in the area, Unian added.
It said that gunfire - including heavy weapons - could also be heard in other parts of the city.
Eastern Ukraine has been unstable since rebels declared independence from the authorities in Kiev in April.
A picture shows a burnt buildings in the village of Maryinka, a suburb of Donetsk in eastern Ukraine, on 5 August 2014.
Civilians have bore the brunt of fighting in recent days, with many homes and buildings damaged in cross fire
At least 1,500 people, both civilians and combatants, are believed to have been killed and thousands more injured since Ukraine's new government sent in troops to put down the insurrection in the regions of Donetsk and Luhansk.
The rebels have since been pushed back to their strongholds in the two cities of the same name, though other pockets of resistance remain.
Separately on Tuesday, Russia called for an emergency meeting of the UN Security Council over the humanitarian situation in Ukraine, Russia's Itar-Tass news agency reports.
It comes after the UN revealed that the number of people fleeing the war in eastern Ukraine to other parts of the country had jumped from 2,600 to 102,600 inside two months.
An armed pro-Russian separatist stands guard at a checkpoint in the settlement of Yasynuvata outside Donetsk, 5 August 2014.
Russian forces have been accused of helping the separatists with rocket barrages, a claim Moscow denies
The figures for early June to early August coincide with a sharp increase in fighting between pro-Russian separatist rebels and security forces.
Russian President Vladimir Putin has also ordered his government to prepare retaliatory measures against the latest round of Western sanctions imposed, local news agencies report.
Russia, which annexed Ukraine's Crimea region in March, has been accused of arming the rebels and has been targeted by US and EU sanctions. Russia denies the accusations.
In a sign of increasing tensions, Ukrainian defence spokesman Andriy Lysenko on Tuesday condemned Russia's plans to carry out military exercises in southern Russia, calling it "a provocation".
He said Russia had massed some 45,000 troops along its shared border with Ukraine.