Two Injured In Car-Bomb Blast In Kharkiv:
KHARKIV, Ukraine -- A senior special-police officer loyal to Kyiv has been injured along with his wife in a car-bomb blast in the eastern city of Kharkiv.
Police told RFE/RL that Andriy Yanholenko and his wife, Inna, were hospitalized after a bomb under Yanholenko's car exploded on March 6.
City officials said they suffered shrapnel wounds.
Yanholenko commands Slobozhanshchyna, a police battalion whose members refused to participate in a crackdown on the protests that led to the ouster of President Viktor Yanukovych in February 2014.
An aide to Interior Minister Arsen Avakov said on Facebook that authorities were treating the blast as a suspected terrorist act.
Four people have been killed and 14 wounded in three apparent bombings since January 19 in Kharkiv, which lies northwest of the site of the conflict between government forces and Russian-backed rebels.
Ukrainian authorities have blamed a series of bomb blasts in Kharkiv and the southern city of Odesa on Russia and the rebels. (Ukr Svc, with UNIAN)
Video from our Ukrainian Service:
The aforementioned car that was blown up in Kharkiv:
Here's the map for today of the security situation in eastern Ukraine, according to the National Security and Defense Council:
Ukrainian Nemtsov witness says receiving threats:
Ukrainian authorities say they have opened a criminal investigation after a key witness in the killing of Russian opposition politician Boris Nemtsov said she had received threats.
Anna Durytska, a 23-year-old Ukrainian model, was with Nemtsov when he was shot dead in central Moscow on February 27.
The Ukrainian Prosecutor-General's Office said on March 6 that Durytska told Kyiv police she had received death threats from unknown people.
It said Prosecutor-General Viktor Shokin had ordered that "all necessary measures are taken to protect the life and health" of Durytska.
A spokesman for the Prosecutor-General Office Andriy Demartyno told AFP news agency that several "police special forces officers" will ensure her safety.
Durytska said on March 3 that she did not see Nemtsov's killer, and could not make out the model or license plate number of a car she saw near the scene. (AFP, Interfax, UNIAN)