Masked men with metal rods and Molotov cocktails prowl the Russian
flag-draped balcony, surveying the crowds below. Stacks of tires topped
with ribbons of razor wire line a makeshift barricade around the main
entrance.Two days after smashing
their way in, hundreds of protesters have transformed this government
building in the industrial city of Donetsk, eastern Ukraine, into the
self-declared "People's Republic of Donetsk."
From the clumsily erected
bulwarks to the lack of a leader or concrete plan, the scenes are
similar to the pro-European rallies in Kiev's Maidan Square in recent
months, with one major difference: Many of these protesters say they
want to join Russia and have called for a referendum on secession from
Ukraine to be held by May 11.
The protesters who let us
into the building are eager to show they are here entirely peacefully,
but it is clear they are prepared for a fight. Doors have been locked
and stairwells blocked at the top of the building to prevent the
Ukrainian military from storming in from above. They've smashed the
pavement outside the building to use as stones. A makeshift hospital and
temporary cafe have been constructed, and locals are keeping the men
and women inside stocked up on food and medical supplies.
Some of the protesters inside the building are happy to see us; others
seem ready to attack us with their bats at a moment's notice. Some are
aggressively anti-American. One of the older men asks us why Americans
are sticking their nose into Ukrainian affairs.One man tells us that
he's from the Eastern Front, a new local group, and that help is on the
way. He says there are 6,000 members of his group who stand ready to
"protect the fatherland." Others are hopeful that a vote to secede from
Ukraine can be held sooner than protesters announced Monday
When the power went out
Monday night, many inside believed Ukraine's special forces were coming
to retake the building. But the Ukrainian military is nowhere to be
seen, and the mood of the protesters is growing ever more defiant.Donetsk is the hometown
of ousted Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych, whose pro-Russian
government was toppled in a popular revolt in February.
Nobody knows for sure
what role, if any, Russia is playing in this latest bout of unrest in
Ukraine. Acting Ukrainian President Oleksandr Turchynov blames
"separatist groups coordinated by Russian special services" for the
revolts in eastern Ukraine, which he said echoed events leading to the
Russian annexation of Crimea three weeks ago.
Since then, Russia has
amassed thousands of troops on its border with eastern Ukraine. And
Russia's Foreign Ministry said reports that protesters are facing a
crackdown by Ukrainian authorities are of particular concern."We are calling for the
immediate cessation of any military preparations, which could lead to
civil war," it said in a statement on its official website.
Protesters say that
local complaints, not Moscow, are driving anti-government sentiments
here in Donetsk. One man, who calls himself Andre, says that Ukraine's
ongoing political crisis has hit his wages and that he can no longer
afford to feed his family. He tells me that he has simply had enough.
Ukrainian officials say
they won't storm the building for now. But the acting President says
those who have seized buildings will be treated as "terrorists" and
prosecuted with the full force of the law.
In the meantime,
protesters say they will continue to fortify their makeshift fortress in
Donetsk, and their tiny pocket of grievances and whims, despite its
size, seems to now be on the front line of a massive struggle for the
future of Ukraine.
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