Ukraine arrests insurgents who ‘planned terror attacks’

Kiev: Ukraine’s security service said today that it had arrested an insurgent group involving three Russian nationals that had stockpiled bombs and planned to carry out “terrorist attacks”, in raids that cost the life of a special forces officer.

The SBU security service claimed Moscow – accused by Kiev and the west of fuelling a pro-Russian insurgency in east Ukraine – was changing tack as fighting abates, seeking to destabilise the country elsewhere in what it called a “transformation of Russian aggression”.

Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko paid tribute to the officer with the elite Alfa special services who perished in the raids, Andriy Kuzmenko, saying he helped prevent further “chaos and anarchy” in the country.

“The insurgents planned to stage terrorist acts in Kiev and Kharkiv to destabilise the situation in the country,” said SBU spokeswoman Olena Gitlyanska, referring to the capital and an industrial city in the northeast.

The leader of the insurgent group was also killed after opening fire during the raids, which took place in Kiev and Kharkiv late yesterday and early today, Gitlyanska said on Facebook.

Another special forces officer was wounded but his condition was stable, she said.

“In one apartment alone, where active resistance was put up and where the leader of the insurgent group was liquidated, eight improvised explosive devices were found,” SBU official Oleksandr Tkachuk told reporters.

“The Russian nationals were detained in another apartment. Twenty-three more explosive devices were found there,” he said.

Gitlyanska added officials had also found automatic weapons, more than 40 grenades and falsified documents.

Tkachuk did not rule out that the detained Russian nationals were linked to Russian special services and accused Moscow of seeking to destabilise Ukraine’s “peaceful cities”.

President Vladimir Putin’s spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters today he did not have any details about the reported raids in Ukraine.

Kiev and the West have accused Russia of sending troops across the border in an alleged attempt to boost the insurgency, claims Moscow denies.

The UN yesterday hailed a “sharp de-escalation of hostilities” in eastern Ukraine since the warring sides signed a new truce on September 1, in a conflict that has claimed more than 9,000 lives since April 2014.