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Kharkiv On Security Alert Following Deadly Blast At Peace March
Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko has called those responsible for the February 22 bombing of a pro-government rally in Kharkiv "terrorist scum."
"Today is memorial Sunday, but on this day terrorist scum revealed its predatory nature," Poroshenko said in a Facebook post. "This is a bold attempt to expand the territory of terrorism."
Authorities say at least two people were killed in the blast, while numerous others were injured. Ukrainian officials say four suspects have been arrested and that they were trained and armed in Russia.
Here's an update from our newsroom:
European Council President Donald Tusk has said he will initiate consulations with European Union leaders on the possibilty of expanding sanctions against Russia for its policies in Ukraine.
Tusk made the comments on February 22 in Kyiv after viewing an exhibition of Russian military equipment captured by Ukrainian security forces during fighting with Russia-backed separatists in eastern Ukraine.
Tusk said he will begin the consultations on February 23.
Tusk participated in a Dignity March to mark the first anniversary of the ouster of former Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych together with the presidents of Germany, Lithuania, Moldova, and Poland.
The EU expanded its black list of Russian and Ukrainian individuals and entities under sanction on February 16, adding two Russian deputy defense ministers, two State Duma deputies, and 15 separatist leaders.
UNIAN reports that a 15-year-old boy who suffered a serious head injury as a result of the February 22 bombing of a Kharkiv peace parade has slipped into a coma and is in "grave condition."
Ukraine's SBU state security service has released a video showing the February 22 detention of suspects who allegedly planned to carry out guerilla attacks targeting Ukrainian military personnel in Kharkiv, where earlier in the day at least two people were killed when a peace march was bombed.
The SBU says it recovered a Russian-made grenade launcher from the suspects and claims the detainees have admitted to receiving wepaons, and instructions from inidividuals with ties to Russia's Federal Security Service (FSB). The SBU claims the "leader of the criminal group" met with FSB officers across the border in the southern Russian city of Belogorod to report on the group's purported diversionary activities and to receive instructions for new actions.
Ukrainian authorities are searching for more suspects who may have been involved in the bombing of the Kharkiv parade on February 22, the SBU said.
In a video statement purportedly issued by the so-called "Kharkiv Partisans," the group has denied involvement in the February 22 bombing of a parade in the eastern Ukrainian city of Kharkiv that killed at least two people and injured several others.
The man reading the statement says that the Kharkiv Partisans does not target large gatherings of civilians in its battle with the "Kyiv junta." That term is used by Russian officials and Russian-backed separatists to describe Ukraine's pro-Western leadership that rose to power after former President Viktor Yanukovych, a Kremlin ally, fled his post amid mass protests in February 2014.
Ukraine's SBU security service released a video on February 22 showing the detention of what it called members of the Kharkiv Partisans who were allegedly planning attacks in the city.
The man reading the puported Kharkiv Partisans statement claims that the bombing of the parade was ordered by Ukrainian Interior Minister Arsen Avakov in order to justify heightened "anti-terrorist" operations in Kharkiv.