Russia seizes Crimean navy head quarters
Sevastopol: Pro-Russian forces captured Ukraine’s naval commander after seizing his headquarters in Crimea on Wednesday as Moscow’s grip tightened on the peninsula despite Western warnings its ‘annexation’ would not go unpunished.
Kiev said it was dispatching its defence minister but Crimea’s regional leader said he would be barred from entry amid mounting tensions in a region at the epicentre of the worst East-West standoff since the Cold War.
Dozens of despondent Ukrainian soldiers – one of them in tears – filed out of the Ukraine’s main navy base in the Black Sea port city of Sevastopol after its storming by hundreds of pro-Kremlin protesters and Russian troops.
“We have been temporarily disbanded,” a Ukrainian lieutenant who identified himself only as Vlad said. “I was born here and I grew up here and I have been serving for 20 years,” he said as a Russian flag went up over the base without a single shot being fired in its defence. “Where am I going to go?”
A Russian forces’ representative said that Ukraine’s navy commander Sergiy Gayduk – appointed after his predecessor switched allegiance in favour of Crimea’s pro-Kremlin authorities at the start of the month – had been detained.
“He was blocked and he had nowhere to go. He was forced out and he has been taken away,” Igor Yeskin told reporters.
A defence ministry spokesman in Crimea said pro-Russian forces also seized the checkpoint set up in front of a Ukrainian military base in the region's western port town of Novoozerne.
Meanwhile Russia’s Constitutional Court unanimously ruled on Wednesday that President Vladimir Putin acted legally by signing a treaty to make Crimea part of Russia, in an essential step in the Russian legal process towards ratifying the treaty.