Ukraine arrests Turkish cargo ship over Crimea port call
KIEV, March 27 (Reuters) - Ukrainian authorities have arrested a Turkish-owned cargo ship and detained its captain over a visit it made to a port in Crimea after Russian annexed the peninsula from Ukraine last year.
Prosecutors said the Tuvalu-registered 5,095 deadweight tonne ship Kanton was being held in the Ukrainian port of Kherson. They said the crew could go to jail for up to three years and the ship could be seized.
The vessel's Istanbul-based owner, Master Shipping Ltd, called the detention illegal.
Russia seized Crimea shortly after Ukrainian protesters toppled a pro-Moscow president in February 2014. Ukraine has said any visit to Crimean ports is illegal, and a ban came into effect in July last year.
Master Shipping told Reuters on Friday that the Kanton called at Sevastopol in Crimea on July 24, 2014 to pick up a cargo of feed barley.
But it said this was before Ukraine had notified international shipping companies and insurers of the ban, and that Ukrainian authorities had later acknowledged this and cleared the vessel to enter other ports.
"The Ukrainian authorities have, despite their written permission, forcefully seized our papers and made the decision to detain our vessel after preventing the vessel's departure for 17 days," it said.
Master Shipping said the 12 crew members, mostly Turkish nationals, were on board the vessel, and none of them had been involved in the disputed Crimean visit.
'I Wanted To Die' -- In Russia, A Woman's Life Unravels After Trip To Kyiv
The director of a Ukrainian choir in Russia has had her life turned upside down since the crisis erupted in Ukraine.
In Dnipropetrovsk, Kolomoyskiy's Departure Leaves No One Indifferent
This week's surprise ouster of oligarch and Dnipropetrovsk Governor Ihor Kolomoyskiy has prompted strong emotions among locals, who -- love him or hate him -- acknowledge the key role he's played in keeping the eastern region safe.
Russian Orthodox Priest Suspended After Blessing Ukraine-Bound Fighters
By RFE/RL
The Russian Orthodox Church has suspended a priest for incendiary comments he made during a send-off for dozens of fighters preparing to join pro-Russian separatists in eastern Ukraine.
Local diocese authorities in the Urals city of Yekaterinburg said in a March 26 statement that the priest, Vladimir Zaitsev, broke with the church’s position on the bloody conflict in Ukraine by encouraging the fighters to battle Ukrainian forces he described as “fascist scum.”
They said his March 11 comments, which were captured on film, should not be considered a "blessing for carrying out a fratricidal war."
They said a decision on whether to reinstate Zaitsev will be made after Easter.
More than 6,000 people have been killed in the conflict since April 2014.
Western governments accuse the Kremlin of providing arms and personnel to the separatists, a charge Moscow denies.
With reporting by Reuters
That concludes our live-blogging of the Ukraine crisis for Friday, March 27. Check back here tomorrow for more of our continuing coverage.
Judge looks to build 'new society' in Ukraine rebel bastion
Donetsk, Ukraine, March 28, 2015 (AFP) -- Even as he breaks down in tears, judge Alexander Klyanoshkin admits no regrets about ending a decade on the bench in his government-held hometown in eastern Ukraine to serve in the pro-Russian breakaway republic of Donetsk.
Along with his wife and children, Klyanoshkin made the 50 kilometres (30 miles) journey south to sign up as a judge in the fledgling court system being established by rebels in their war-scarred capital.
Now his dream is to help build what he hopes will be a "new society" in the self-proclaimed separatist statelet.
Klyanoshkin says he left Kiev-held territory to cross over to the legally unrecognised would-be country after becoming "disgusted" by the Ukrainian authorities, whom he views as illegitimate.
"That country (Ukraine) has no future," he says, sitting in a leather chair in his new office.
Pro-European President Petro Poroshenko, voted in last May after the ouster of Kremlin-backed leader Viktor Yanukovych, "took power by unconstitutional means", the judge insists.
"A president must be elected according to the constitution and not by revolution," he says, with the flag of the enclave the rebels have carved out through a brutal uprising on his desk.
After almost a year of fighting that has cost the lives of more than 6,000 people, the legal system in the rebel republic is still in its infancy.
The basis of it -- and everything that Klyanoshkin believes to "the bottom of his soul" -- is bound up in a new "Criminal Code", published by the separatist leaders.
- 'Respect power!' -
The little book -- with a cover depicting a Russian eagle on top of the separatist flag -- replaces the Ukrainian code that rules in the rest of the country.
The new criminal code is "more humane" than its Ukrainian counterpart, the judge says, citing its reduced reliance on custodial sentences.
A new civil code should follow, but not without a lot of debate over its contents, he adds.
"People should respect power! And if they want to fight against it, they must do so through democratic means," he argues.
"I do not see democracy in Ukraine. I was attracted by the Donetsk People's Republic because this 'state' respects the fundamental principles of law: respect for the individual, religion and cultural diversity."
According to the judge, the refusal of the international community, notably France and Germany, to recognise DPR's legitimacy "does not matter".
"It may take a year, 10 years, but the international community will recognise the People's Republic," he predicts.
"We will convince them by promoting democratic principles. And because we are creating a new society."
Klyanoshkin served in the judicial system for 10 years in his home city of Artemivsk, but claims decisions there were made "not by law but by politics".
After a decade of resentment, he says, "it is very hard to be disappointed here".
"There will certainly be challenges, but I'm ready to do anything so that the judicial powers will be respected," added the stocky judge, but stressed that it must be "without violence".
He suddenly breaks down in tears when asked if his eight-year-old daughter blames him for taking the family from their old life, away from the bombs and fear.
"No, I think she understands. But when she watches a film about the war on television, she cries," he admits, rushing to the window to hide his tears.
"During the bombing, we hid in our bedrooms," he recalls, looking down on the street.
Meanwhile, his 20-year-old son is following his father's footsteps, and just now completing his law studies.
Ukraine accuses rebels of firing Grad rockets
Kiev, March 28, 2015 (AFP) -- Ukraine government forces on Saturday accused pro-Russian separatists of using Grad multiple rocket launchers overnight in the country's war-torn east in violation of a truce deal signed last month.
Military spokesman Andriy Lysenko told reporters that separatists fired the heavy weapons towards the village of Novotoshkivka from their Lugansk stronghold.
Around 40 missiles were aimed at a Ukrainian checkpoint, while another 20 hit a residential area, he claimed, adding that there had been no military or civilian casualties over the last 24 hours.
The use of Grads is prohibited under the ceasefire brokered by French President Francois Hollande, German Chancellor Angela Merkel and Russian President Vladimir Putin that came into force on February 15.
Despite the agreement, eastern Ukraine has been the scene of daily clashes. The nearly year-long conflict has claimed more than 6,000 lives.
Meanwhile, Turkish diplomat Ertugrul Apakan, who heads the OSCE monitoring team, called on both sides to stop the fighting around the village of Shyrokyne, where a civilian was killed on Thursday.
"I am profoundly disappointed that, in the face of mounting deaths and injuries among the civilian population, the calm that prevailed in Shyrokyne for two days has not endured," he said in a statement issued overnight Friday.
"I urge all sides to silence their guns immediately, and to allow the residents of Shyrokyne to return to their homes and to a peaceful existence."
The village is 10 kilometres (six miles) from the strategic port of Mariupol, the last major city in the rebel-controlled east still held by Kiev.