Kiev says Russia masses troops on Ukraine border

Agence France-Presse

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Kiev says Russia masses troops on Ukraine border
Crimea residents had also noticed Russian troop movements going towards the border last week

SIMFEROPOL, Crimea – The Ukrainian government accused Russia on Thursday, September 18, of massing around 4,000 troops on the border of Russian-annexed Crimea and Ukraine, as Crimean residents also reported seeing troop movements.

“According to our information, almost all military units of the Russian Federation stationed in the north of occupied Crimea… were pushed to the administrative border with Ukraine along with all their equipment and ammunition,” National Security and Defense Council spokesman Andriy Lysenko told reporters.

He said the units, totalling about 4,000 troops, were deployed in “small tactical groups” along the border in Crimea, the Ukrainian Black Sea peninsula that Russia annexed in March.

Ukraine’s border service said Thursday that Russia was also using drones for air reconnaissance, with border guards reporting 3 cases of the use of drones in the last 24 hours, one near Mariuopol in eastern Ukraine, and two on the Crimea border.

Crimea residents, who asked for their surnames not to be published, told Agence France-Presse (AFP) that they had noticed Russian troop movements going towards the border last week, ahead of Sunday’s local elections won by Russia’s ruling party.

“Tanks and some types of artillery were clearly seen moving on open railway cars through the station of Krasnoperekopsk towards Ukraine. I saw them myself,” Sanie, a resident of the town of Krasnoperekopsk close to the border, told AFP.

She said that her friends in the village of Ishun, close to the highway that crosses the border, had also called her last week to say that “military hardware was going past all the time… about 20 at a time.”

“There were several of these convoys. The vehicles were closed and they couldn’t see what was inside: soldiers or equipment,” Sanie said.

A resident of the town of Dzhankoy southeast of the border, Muzafer, confirmed he had spotted troop movements around a week ago.

“It’s definitely the case that military vehicles were going towards the border then with soldiers,” he told AFP. “In the last few days there have not been any troop movements. If there had been, people would have talked about it.”

However, an AFP reporter on Thursday saw 3 military vehicles carrying Grad multiple rocket launchers outside Crimea’s main city of Simferopol.

Russia’s Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu said earlier this week that Moscow planned to boost troop numbers in Crimea because of what he described as a deteriorating situation in Ukraine and a buildup of foreign troops near its border.

Russia is deeply concerned at NATO’s move eastwards and President Vladimir Putin has accused the West of provoking the crisis in Ukraine in order to “revive” the military bloc. (READ: Russia, Ukraine trade blame as fighting tests truce)

NATO this month agreed to boost its presence in eastern Europe, and the United States is currently staging war games in western Ukraine, along with another 14 countries.

Russia’s Black Sea fleet is based in Crimea and Moscow announced in July that it had begun expanding and modernising it with new ships and submarines.

In weekend elections, Putin’s ruling United Russia Party won more than 70% of the vote in Crimea’s regional parliament, a poll the United States rejected as illegitimate. – Rappler.com

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