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Ukraine Beats Rebels in Kramatorsk, Secures 'Safety Corridor'

Pro-Russian separatists of the self-proclaimed Luhansk People's Republic remove the state coat of arms of Ukraine from a gate of the regional administration building, in the eastern Ukrainian city of Luhansk. Shamil Zhumatov / Reuters

Pro-Russian separatists attacked Ukrainian military checkpoints and other strategic points in eastern Ukraine overnight but they were beaten off with only minor casualties on the Ukrainian side, a government forces spokesman said Tuesday.

In a three-hour battle near the airport of Kramatorsk, rebels attacked the army with mortars but government forces returned fire, destroying their position and killing 40 "mercenaries," said the spokesman, Vladislav Seleznyov.

This figure could not be independently confirmed, and there was no immediate word from the side of the separatists.

In Slovyansk, just north of Kramatorsk, two Ukrainian soldiers were wounded when rebels who control the city attacked an army position on the perimeter using grenade-launchers.

In Luhansk, on the border with Russia, separatist fighters opened fire on the airport and nearby Ukrainian army positions.

"The attack of the [separatist] fighters was repelled by special force units. There are no losses on the Ukrainian side," said Seleznyov.

Separatist rebellions broke out in Russian-speaking regions of eastern Ukraine in April after street protests in the capital Kiev toppled a Moscow-backed president. Scores of separatists, members of government forces and civilians have been killed.

Kiev has accused Moscow of fomenting the unrest and allowing mercenaries from Russia to cross the long border with consignments of arms to support the rebels. Moscow denies this.

"Safety Corridor"

Ukraine's newly-elected pro-Western president, Petro Poroshenko, who took office on Saturday, has pledged to end the fighting while promising to address the legitimate grievances of people in the east, by for example granting them greater autonomy and guaranteeing the status of the Russian language.

Ukraine said Monday that it had reached a "mutual understanding" with Russia on parts of a peace plan proposed by Poroshenko, though it gave no details and Moscow made no direct comment on the issue.

However, the overnight clashes demonstrated the continuing high tensions in the hot spots of eastern Ukraine.

In a statement Tuesday, Poroshenko ordered security agencies to organize transport and relocation to help civilians leave the affected areas. Most of those displaced in east Ukraine, which the United Nations Refugee Agency estimated in May at 10,000, have not previously received aid or transport from the Kiev government.

Poroshenko said Saturday that he would grant amnesty to any insurgents who laid down their arms and had not been involved in bloodshed, and encouraged the creation of a safe corridor for rebels to go to Russia, but he ruled out negotiations with any "gangsters and killers" among them.

(Reuters, The Associated Press)

See also:

Putin and Poroshenko Square Up

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