Russia wants OSCE to probe Kiev sniper 'cover-up' as mission is turned away from Crimea
OSCE mission members have been blocked from entering Crimea on three separate occasions.
Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov on Saturday called for an OSCE investigation into who was behind the deaths of dozens of people in Kiev last month in attacks by snipers, saying the truth could no longer be "covered up", even as the OSCE mission was turned away from entering Crimea amid what the investigators said was a forced media blackout.
Lavrov's comments came after Estonia's top diplomat told EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton in a phone call leaked this week that the then-Ukrainian opposition to president Viktor Yanukovych may have been involved in the attacks.
The leaked call has been played up by Russian state media over the last few days and Lavrov's comments were the latest sign Moscow wants to use the sniper controversy as an argument to discredit Ukraine's new authorities.
"The latest information about the so-called snipers case can no longer be covered up," Lavrov told a news conference in Moscow with his Tajik counterpart.
"We have proposed that the OSCE (Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe) takes up an objective investigation of this and we will ensure there is justice.
"There have been too many lies, and this lie has been used too long to push European public opinion in the wrong direction, contrary to the objective facts."
Western states have blamed Yanukovych's now disbanded elite riot police force for much of the killing that rocked Kiev in February.
However Russia has strongly emphasised the leaked phone call between Estonian Foreign Minister Urmas Paet and Ashton as evidence for its argument that the new post-Yanukovych government in Kiev is made up of dangerous extremists.
"If all those things were to be investigated, then, I think, a completely different picture would be drawn compared to what is being depicted by American media and, unfortunately, by some American and European politicians," Russia's ambassador to the UN Vitaly Churkin told the state-run English language RT channel.
The new anti-Yanukovych Ukrainian government has meanwhile implied that Russia may have itself had a hand in the bloodshed.
In the audio of the February 26 call, whose authenticity was confirmed by Estonia, Paet told Ashton he was informed in Kiev that "they were the same snipers killing people from both sides".
Dozens of protesters and around 15 police officers were killed in the attacks.
Paet, who had held talks with Ukraine's new leaders on February 25, added: "It's really disturbing that now the new coalition, they don't want to investigate what exactly happened."
Ashton sounds taken aback by his remarks: "I think we do want to investigate. I mean I didn't know. I didn't pick that up. Gosh."
Russian President Vladimir Putin had appeared to allude to the controversy in his news conference on Tuesday, a day before the audio tape was posted on Wednesday.
"Have you not heard that now there is the opinion... that these (snipers) were provocateurs from one of the opposition parties? Have you not heard about that?" Putin asked a reporter, saying the information was available on "open sources".
The release of the tape echoed another tape leaked in February when US Assistant Secretary of State Victoria Nuland and US ambassador to Kiev, Geoff Pyatt, were heard discussing which opposition figures should be in a new Ukrainian government.
Nuland also used colourful language to criticise the EU, exposing tensions with the bloc at a crucial time. The source of the tape was never made clear but US officials strongly implied Russia was to blame.
The Estonian foreign ministry said it rejected the claim that Paet was "giving an assessment of the opposition's involvement in the violence".
"The fact that this phone call has been leaked is not a coincidence," it quoted Paet as saying.
OSCE turned away from Crimea
Moscow's call for an OSCE investigation comes as unarmed observers from the same organisation have been blocked from entering Crimea on three separate occasions. On Saturday they were stopped after shots were fired as they approached a checkpoint manned by pro-Russian forces.
The source said several shots were fired in the air as a convoy including the observers' buses approached a checkpoint manned by pro-Russian forces, but added that the shots did not appear directed at the observers.
The source said "probably three shots" were fired, "but not because of us, because of one small car that was in the line sight" between the convoy and the checkpoint.
The source noted the shots were fired as soon as they arrived at the checkpoint, at Armyansk on the western road leading from mainland Ukraine into the Crimea peninsula.
Nobody was injured, the source said, adding that about 40 armed men wearing balaclavas and military fatigues were manning the checkpoint.
It was the third day in a row the monitors from the Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe had tried and failed to enter Crimea.
On Thursday they were turned away from the checkpoint at Armyansk and on Friday, they were barred from entering at another checkpoint at Chongar, on the eastern road to Crimea.
A source in the monitoring mission said that men at Armyansk seemed more settled on Saturday than during the observers' first attempt.
"The level of self-confidence today of the armed men was much higher than two days ago," the source said.
The OSCE had earlier said its observers would try again to enter Crimea on Saturday, adding that its mission now numbered 54 military and civilian staff from 29 countries.
The unarmed observer mission by the Vienna-based OSCE - whose 57 members include Ukraine and Russia - is aimed at defusing tensions in Crimea.
Russian forces have surrounded Ukrainian military bases on the peninsula and local lawmakers have decided to renounce ties with Ukraine and stage a March 16 referendum on switching over to Kremlin rule.
Forced media blackout
In a statement released by the OSCE on Saturday, the mission expressed concern over the forced blackout of media outlets in Crimea.
“Extreme censorship, shutting down media outlets and press hubs and attacks and intimidation of journalists must stop immediately,” Mijatović said. “In times of crisis people must have an unimpeded access to a plurality of sources; otherwise they can be subjected to the worst kind of propaganda.”
Lavrov's comments came after Estonia's top diplomat told EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton in a phone call leaked this week that the then-Ukrainian opposition to president Viktor Yanukovych may have been involved in the attacks.
The leaked call has been played up by Russian state media over the last few days and Lavrov's comments were the latest sign Moscow wants to use the sniper controversy as an argument to discredit Ukraine's new authorities.
"The latest information about the so-called snipers case can no longer be covered up," Lavrov told a news conference in Moscow with his Tajik counterpart.
"We have proposed that the OSCE (Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe) takes up an objective investigation of this and we will ensure there is justice.
"There have been too many lies, and this lie has been used too long to push European public opinion in the wrong direction, contrary to the objective facts."
Western states have blamed Yanukovych's now disbanded elite riot police force for much of the killing that rocked Kiev in February.
However Russia has strongly emphasised the leaked phone call between Estonian Foreign Minister Urmas Paet and Ashton as evidence for its argument that the new post-Yanukovych government in Kiev is made up of dangerous extremists.
"If all those things were to be investigated, then, I think, a completely different picture would be drawn compared to what is being depicted by American media and, unfortunately, by some American and European politicians," Russia's ambassador to the UN Vitaly Churkin told the state-run English language RT channel.
The new anti-Yanukovych Ukrainian government has meanwhile implied that Russia may have itself had a hand in the bloodshed.
In the audio of the February 26 call, whose authenticity was confirmed by Estonia, Paet told Ashton he was informed in Kiev that "they were the same snipers killing people from both sides".
Dozens of protesters and around 15 police officers were killed in the attacks.
Paet, who had held talks with Ukraine's new leaders on February 25, added: "It's really disturbing that now the new coalition, they don't want to investigate what exactly happened."
Ashton sounds taken aback by his remarks: "I think we do want to investigate. I mean I didn't know. I didn't pick that up. Gosh."
Russian President Vladimir Putin had appeared to allude to the controversy in his news conference on Tuesday, a day before the audio tape was posted on Wednesday.
"Have you not heard that now there is the opinion... that these (snipers) were provocateurs from one of the opposition parties? Have you not heard about that?" Putin asked a reporter, saying the information was available on "open sources".
The release of the tape echoed another tape leaked in February when US Assistant Secretary of State Victoria Nuland and US ambassador to Kiev, Geoff Pyatt, were heard discussing which opposition figures should be in a new Ukrainian government.
Nuland also used colourful language to criticise the EU, exposing tensions with the bloc at a crucial time. The source of the tape was never made clear but US officials strongly implied Russia was to blame.
The Estonian foreign ministry said it rejected the claim that Paet was "giving an assessment of the opposition's involvement in the violence".
"The fact that this phone call has been leaked is not a coincidence," it quoted Paet as saying.
OSCE turned away from Crimea
Moscow's call for an OSCE investigation comes as unarmed observers from the same organisation have been blocked from entering Crimea on three separate occasions. On Saturday they were stopped after shots were fired as they approached a checkpoint manned by pro-Russian forces.
The source said several shots were fired in the air as a convoy including the observers' buses approached a checkpoint manned by pro-Russian forces, but added that the shots did not appear directed at the observers.
The source said "probably three shots" were fired, "but not because of us, because of one small car that was in the line sight" between the convoy and the checkpoint.
The source noted the shots were fired as soon as they arrived at the checkpoint, at Armyansk on the western road leading from mainland Ukraine into the Crimea peninsula.
Nobody was injured, the source said, adding that about 40 armed men wearing balaclavas and military fatigues were manning the checkpoint.
It was the third day in a row the monitors from the Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe had tried and failed to enter Crimea.
On Thursday they were turned away from the checkpoint at Armyansk and on Friday, they were barred from entering at another checkpoint at Chongar, on the eastern road to Crimea.
A source in the monitoring mission said that men at Armyansk seemed more settled on Saturday than during the observers' first attempt.
"The level of self-confidence today of the armed men was much higher than two days ago," the source said.
The OSCE had earlier said its observers would try again to enter Crimea on Saturday, adding that its mission now numbered 54 military and civilian staff from 29 countries.
The unarmed observer mission by the Vienna-based OSCE - whose 57 members include Ukraine and Russia - is aimed at defusing tensions in Crimea.
Russian forces have surrounded Ukrainian military bases on the peninsula and local lawmakers have decided to renounce ties with Ukraine and stage a March 16 referendum on switching over to Kremlin rule.
Forced media blackout
In a statement released by the OSCE on Saturday, the mission expressed concern over the forced blackout of media outlets in Crimea.
“Extreme censorship, shutting down media outlets and press hubs and attacks and intimidation of journalists must stop immediately,” Mijatović said. “In times of crisis people must have an unimpeded access to a plurality of sources; otherwise they can be subjected to the worst kind of propaganda.”