ebruary 28, 2014 -- Updated 1822 GMT (0222 HKT)
Simferopol, Ukraine (CNN) -- Ousted Ukrainian
President Viktor Yanukovych gave a defiant performance Friday in Russia,
insisting he remained his country's legitimate elected leader and was
not giving up.
The Ukrainian government accused Russian Black Sea forces of trying to
seize two airports in Crimea on Friday, but said its security forces had
prevented them from taking control. FULL STORY
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WHERE THINGS STAND
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WHY UKRAINE IS DIVIDED
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Viktor Yanukovych: I'm still Ukraine's President, will fight for its future
February 28, 2014 -- Updated 1857 GMT (0257 HKT)
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
- NEW: The White House says it has "deep concerns" about developments in Ukraine
- NEW: Russian President Vladimir Putin to EU leaders: Ukraine must avoid an escalation of violence
- NEW: Airspace in Crimea is closed, with no planes able to take off or land
- Ousted Ukrainian leader Viktor Yanukovych says he didn't order police to fire on protesters
"I intend to continue the
fight for the future of Ukraine against those who, with fear and with
terror, are attempting to replace the power," Yanukovych said in
Russian, not Ukrainian.
"Nobody has overturned me. I was compelled to leave Ukraine due to a direct threat to my life and my nearest and dearest."
Making his first public
appearance since his ouster Saturday, Yanukovych said the newly
appointed interim government was not legitimate and did not represent
the majority of Ukraine's 45 million citizens.
Ukraine: Russian soldiers invaded airport
Tensions rise over Crimean peninsula
Ukraine faces threats of secession
Gunmen seize Crimean parliament
The news conference,
which lasted more than an hour, came as Ukraine's authorities faced
rising tensions and a possible threat of secession in its
Russian-majority southern Crimean region.
The government accused
Russian Black Sea forces of trying to seize two airports Friday in
Crimea but said Ukrainian security forces had prevented them from taking
control.
Interior Minister Arsen
Avakov earlier characterized the presence of the unidentified armed men,
who wore uniforms without insignia, as an "armed invasion."
Kerry talks to Russian foreign minister
The Russian Foreign
Ministry said maneuvers of armored vehicles from the Russian Black Sea
Fleet in Crimea were needed for security and were in line with bilateral
agreements.
U.S. Secretary of State
John Kerry said he spoke with Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov on
Friday morning about the airport and military activities, and Lavrov
told Kerry that the Russians "are not engaging in any violation of the
sovereignty" of Ukraine. Russia has a military base agreement with the
country.
Lavrov told him the military exercises were prescheduled and unrelated to the events in Ukraine, Kerry said.
"I nevertheless made it
clear that that could be misinterpreted at the moment,'' Kerry said,
"and there are enough tensions that it is important for everybody to be
extremely careful not to inflame the situation and send the wrong
messages."
Yanukovych's news conference was under way in Russia, Kerry said, as he spoke with Lavrov.
He said Lavrov had reaffirmed to him a commitment that Russia would "respect the territorial integrity of Ukraine."
Kerry said Russian President Vladimir Putin made the same commitment to President Barack Obama when they spoke last week.
Kerry urged calm to all parties.
"We would overwhelmingly
stress today that we urge all parties -- all parties; that includes the
new interim technical government, rightists, oppositionists and others,
anybody in the street who is armed -- we urge all parties to avoid any
steps that could be misinterpreted or lead to miscalculation or do
anything other than to work to bring that peace and stability and
peaceful transition within the governing process within Ukraine," he
said.
White House press
secretary Jay Carney said the United States is looking to see whether
Russia is doing anything that would cross the line in Ukraine, adding
there is "deep concern" about developments in Crimea.
Carney would not say what the U.S. options would be if Russia intervenes in Ukraine.
The Russian response
In a telephone call with
European leaders, Putin stressed the importance of avoiding a further
escalation of violence in Ukraine, the Kremlin said in a prepared
statement Friday. Putin also called for a normalization of the
situation, speaking with German Chancellor Angela Merkel, British Prime
Minister David Cameron and European Council President Herman Van Rompuy,
according to the Kremlin.
Crimea was handed to
Ukraine by the Soviet Union in 1954. Just over half its population is
ethnic Russian, while about a quarter are Ukrainians and a little more
than 10% are Crimean Tatars, a predominantly Muslim group oppressed
under former Soviet leader Josef Stalin.
Meanwhile, Russian
lawmakers introduced two bills Friday to simplify annexing new
territories into the Russian Federation and simplify access to Russian
citizenship for Ukrainians, the Russian state news agency Itar Tass
said.
One bill also stipulates
that accession of a part of a foreign state to Russia should be taken
through a referendum, according to Russian state news agency RIA
Novosti.
In Crimea, which is
roiling with political turmoil, the region's airspace was closed Friday,
prohibiting any plane from taking off or landing, the head of the
Crimean capital airport said. The order came from authorities in Kiev
without any further explanation, said Yevgeniy Plaksin, director of the
international airport in Simferopol. Plaksin didn't immediately know how
long the restrictions would last.
At the United Nations,
the president of the U.N. Security Council was scheduled to hold a
private council meeting in connection to a letter from Ukraine's
representative, and that private meeting was to be followed by "informal
consultations of the whole" on the matter, the president said in a
prepared statement.
Yanukovych: No orders to shoot
In his speech,
Yanukovych accused the interim authorities in Ukraine of propagating
violence. He spoke against a backdrop of Ukraine's blue and yellow flags
before reporters in the Russian city of Rostov-on-Don about 700 miles
south of Moscow.
He blamed them for last week's bloodshed in which dozens of protesters died in clashes with security forces.
"I never gave any orders
to shoot," he said, adding that he sought peace and that the security
forces took up arms only when their lives were at risk.
He said Western powers
-- including the United States -- that helped broker an unimplemented
deal between his government and the opposition for early elections also
bore responsibility for the situation.
Yanukovych is wanted in Ukraine on charges connected to the deaths of demonstrators.
He insisted he had not
fled Ukraine but had left after he was "shot at virtually from all
sides" while traveling within the country after leaving Kiev.
And he said he was "ashamed" he had not been able to maintain stability in his country.
"I want to apologize in
front of everybody -- to the veterans, to the Ukrainian people -- that I
did not have the strength to stop what is now taking place," he said.
Next steps?
Yanukovych said he had spoken with Putin by phone but had not met with him.
He will not ask for
Russian military support to return him to power, he said. But he said he
was "surprised" that Putin had remained silent so far on the events
unfolding in Russia's western neighbor.
Michael McFaul, the
former U.S. ambassador to Russia, told CNN the fact that Yanukovych was
not in Moscow and had not met with Putin suggested he might not be in
high standing with the Russian leader at present.
Asked how he intended to
fight for Ukraine's future from outside its borders, Yanukovych did not
give a clear response but said he would return to Ukraine once his
safety could be guaranteed.
But he will not participate in the presidential elections slated by the new government for May, he said.
"The elections of May 25
are illegal, and I will not take part in them," he said. "Elections
must take place in accordance with the laws and constitution of
Ukraine."
In the face of concerns
that the Russian-majority Crimean region may seek to secede, Yanukovych
said Ukraine must remain "united and undivided."
But at the same time, he said, "The citizens of Crimea do not want to be subordinate to nationalists and bandits."
Armed men at airports
Back in Kiev, Andrii
Parubii, chief of national security and defense, said Ukrainian military
and police forces had stopped Russian military forces from seizing two
airports in the Crimean region.
The Russian military is
on the outside of both airports, Parubii said in a televised news
conference from the Ukrainian parliament.
Weapons were not used during the operation, said Avakov, the interior minister.
Russian armored vehicles were moving toward Simferopol on Friday, the Ukrainian news outlet TSN reported.
A CNN team in Crimea
reported seeing the Ukrainian flag flying on top of an air traffic
control tower in Ukromnoye, near the main Simferopol airport.
The men in military
uniforms had been seen patrolling the airport in the regional capital,
Simferopol, as well as a military and civilian airbase in nearby
Sevastopol since early Friday.
Avakov said the armed
men at the Sevastopol air base were troops from Russia's Black Sea
Fleet, stationed in the port city. They were in camouflage uniforms
without military insignia, he said.
Writing on Facebook,
Avakov called Russia's actions "an armed invasion and occupation" and "a
direct military provocation on sovereign Ukrainian territory."
The presence of the armed men has not affected the Simferopol airport, civil aviation authorities said.
"We are checking to make
sure that no radicals come to Crimea from Kiev, from the Ukraine," said
one man outside the airport, who didn't give his name. "We don't want
radicals, we don't want fascism, we don't want problems."
Other men outside the
airport, dressed in black rather than military fatigues, said they
belonged to the pro-Russia Unity Party and had come on orders of the new
Crimean administration -- voted in Thursday after armed men seized
regional government buildings.
Concerned about the
latest developments, Ukraine's parliament passed a resolution Friday
that demanded Russia halt any activity that can be interpreted as an
attack on its sovereignty.
Meanwhile, Russia continued snap military exercises on Ukraine's doorstep.
Moscow alarmed some observers by announcing the surprise military exercises Wednesday in its western and central areas.
Those continue Friday,
Russia's Defense Ministry said, with more than 80 combat helicopters set
to take to the skies in Russia's Western Military District, which
borders Ukraine, for search and rescue drills.
U.S. Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel warned Thursday against provocations by any party.
"I'm closely watching
Russia's military exercises along the Ukrainian border," he said. "I
expect Russia to be transparent about these activities, and I urge them
not to take any steps that could be misinterpreted or lead to
miscalculations during a very delicate time."
A house divided
Ever since Yanukovych's
ouster, Ukraine has faced a deepening schism, with those in the west
generally supporting the interim government and its European Union tilt,
while many in the east prefer a Ukraine where Russia casts a long
shadow.
Nowhere is that feeling
more intense than in Crimea, the last big bastion of opposition to the
new political leadership. And Ukraine suspects Russia of fomenting
tension in the autonomous region that might escalate into a bid for
separation by its Russian majority.
In Crimea, government
administration buildings in Simferopol remained under siege Friday, a
day after armed men stormed in and planted Russia's flag atop the
parliament building.
On Thursday, in a vote
of no confidence, pro-Russian members of the Crimean parliament
dismissed the government of Premier Anatolii Mohyliov, who was perceived
as pro-Kiev.
The lawmakers also scheduled a referendum on greater autonomy for the region within Ukrainian territory.
The date of the referendum is May 25, when Ukraine is set to hold presidential and local elections.
On Thursday, lawmakers
in Kiev approved opposition leader Arseniy Yatsenyuk as Prime Minister.
He made clear he believes the country's future rests in closer ties to
Europe, not Russia.
Assets frozen in Switzerland, Austria
Ukrainian media have alleged corruption by Yanukovych, citing evidence found in the lavish residence he abandoned.
The Swiss government
said Friday it was freezing assets in Switzerland that belong to
Yanukovych and his entourage to avoid any potential embezzlement of
Ukrainian public funds.
If the funds are found
to have been amassed illegally, they can be returned to Ukraine after
any criminal conviction of Yanukovych and his entourage, it said. The 20 people
named by Switzerland include Yanukovych, his son Oleksandr and former
government ministers, including ex-Prime Minister Mykola Azarov.
Austria's Foreign
Ministry said it was also freezing the accounts of 18 Ukrainian
nationals at the request of Ukraine's new authorities, with "the
backdrop of possible human rights abuses during the bloody power
struggle in Ukraine and because of possible corruption."
Yanukovych said at Friday's news conference he had no money, bank accounts or other assets overseas.
CNN's Victoria Eastwood, Diana Magnay and
Nadjie Femi reported from Simferopol, Ukraine, Ingrid Formanek from Kiev
and Frederik Pleitgen from Moscow. Laura Smith-Spark wrote from London.
Journalist Azad Safarov and CNN's Alla Eshchenko, Richard Allen Greene
and Michael Martinez contributed to this report
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