Civilians under threat as Ukraine clashes flare

Dunya News

Ukraine made fresh accusations of Moscow backing the separatists.

DONETSK (AFP) - Deadly clashes between Ukrainian forces and pro-Russian rebels threatened civilians in central Donetsk on Monday, with shelling hitting a hospital and warnings of insurgents launching attacks from residential areas.

Ukraine also made fresh accusations of Moscow backing the separatists, alleging that hundreds of Russian troops crossed the border into rebel-held territory to join the fight.

After a pause in the fighting early Monday as Orthodox Christians celebrated Epiphany, clashes reignited in the afternoon, with regular explosions heard coming from the direction of the Donetsk airport northwest of the city.

The airport has been the flashpoint of an upsurge in violence in recent days that has left a September truce in tatters, with heavy combat shaking the area at the weekend after Ukraine launched a major counter-offensive to push out the rebels.

The hospital hit on Monday is however located in the centre of Donetsk, and rebel officials who control the area reported six wounded, including one doctor and five patients. The building s front was damaged and windows were blown out.

A university across from the hospital was also hit and there was speculation in the neighbourhood over whether the intended target was the nearby separatist security ministry.

Larissa Polyakova, who was nearby, said students at the university barely missed being hit.

"Shells fell on the window," she said. "Miraculously, the students had left the room 15 minutes before. Can you imagine what would have happened if they were still inside?"

Elsewhere, in Debaltseve some 60 kilometres (around 40 miles) north of Donetsk, artillery fire killed three people on Monday and wounded 12, according to Ukrainian officials.

Concerns mounted over the fate of civilians, with rebels said to be launching attacks from residential areas and Ukrainian forces accused of returning fire.

"The use of heavily populated areas for launching attacks by pro-Russian separatists in Donetsk and Horlivka and the return of fire into these areas by pro-Kiev forces is putting civilian lives in great danger," Denis Krivosheev, deputy Europe and Central Asia programme director for Amnesty International, said in a statement.

Ukraine s military reported at least three soldiers killed over the last 24 hours and another 66 wounded, but claimed to be in control of the airport.

Rebels have disputed Kiev s account and there was no independent confirmation, with journalists unable to approach the site.

The blackened and wrecked airport has been hit by repeated on-off clashes, and control has often been divided between a new and old terminal and other installations.

An adviser to Ukraine s president said rebels blew up part of a ceiling at the battered airport on Monday, causing a section of it to collapse and wounding many soldiers.

It was unclear if the wounded were included in the toll reported earlier by the military and further details of the incident were not immediately clear.