Putin: Kiev authorities are junta if they use force against civilians
If Kiev authorities have started to use force against the civilian population, this is a serious crime, Russian President Vladimir Putin said. Taking this action makes them a “junta” and may affect their relations with other countries, he added.
“If the Kiev regime started military actions against the country’s population, this is without doubt a very serious crime,” Putin said at All-Russia People's Front media forum.
According to Putin current situation in East Ukraine is another proof Russia was right when it supported Crimeans, when they decided to have a referendum.
“[Otherwise] it would have seen there the same things which are now happening in the east of Ukraine, or even worse,” he said. “That’s one more proof to the fact we did it all right and in time.”
Putin believes that the use of force by the coup-imposed government in Kiev means that it’s actually a junta.
“If current authorities in Kiev have done this [used force], then they are junta,” the president said. “For one thing, they don’t have nation-wide mandate. They might have some elements of legitimacy, but only within the framework of the parliament. The rest of the government bodies are for various reasons illegitimate.”
Vladimir Putin described the use of force in eastern Ukraine as a
“reprisal raid” and said that it would have an impact on
Russian-Ukrainian relations.
Earlier in the day, fighting erupted just outside Slavyansk, a
town in eastern Ukraine where the population voiced their protest
against the Kiev authorities. Ukrainian troops in tanks and
armored vehicles have been trying to break into the town.
According to the Ukrainian Interior ministry, at least five
self-defense guards have been killed and one policeman injured
after the “anti-terrorist operation” launched by Kiev in the
town. Three checkpoints erected by the anti-government protesters
have also been destroyed.
Self-defense forces managed to repel an attack at one checkpoint
3 kilometers north of Slavyansk, forcing at least three infantry
vehicles to retreat, Russia-24 TV reports.
On Wednesday, authorities in Kiev announced they were resuming a
military operation against protesters in eastern Ukraine, which
they described as an “anti-terrorist” one.
Protesters believe the move was contrary to the agreement on de-escalation reached in Geneva.