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Aleksandr Malykhin, chairman of Luhansk's separatist election commission, announces results of the referendum in the Luhansk region on May 12.
Aleksandr Malykhin, chairman of Luhansk's separatist election commission, announces results of the referendum in the Luhansk region on May 12.

Live Blog: Crisis In Ukraine (Archive)

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-- Self-appointed leaders of the Ukrainian separatist region of Donetsk appealed to Russia to consider absorbing it to "restore historic justice" and to send in troops.

-- Pro-Russian separatists in the eastern Ukrainian region of Luhansk said they would not allow voting for the May 25 presidential election to be conducted.

-- Diplomats say the European Union agreed to impose sanctions against 13 additional individuals and two companies, believed to be the first time the EU has targeted companies over the Ukraine crisis.

-- Ukrainian President Oleksandr Turchynov called the votes a "sham" and the United States said they were illegal and merely "an attempt to create further division and disorder in the country."

-- RFE/RL's Ukrainian Service said one of its affiliate radio stations in Donetsk was taken off the air by gunmen and replaced by a pro-Russian broadcaster.

-- The Kremlin said Ukrainian officials in Kyiv should hold talks with pro-Russian separatists on the results of the self-rule referendums, adding that it respected the "expression of the people's will."

-- Insurgents in eastern Ukraine said nearly 90 percent of voters backed self-rule in the votes.

*NOTE: Times are stated according to local time in Kyiv
08:06 3.5.2014
This horrific video appears to show Ukrainian nationalists lobbing Molotov cocktails into the trade union building, where over 30 people reportedly died yesterday in a fire.

The Kyiv Post has a write up of the incident.
The Interior Ministry reports that at least 31 people died in the fire, a majority of whom suffocated. Some died in a desperate attempt to escape after leaping from the building's meters-high windows. The Odessa city website, meanwhile, reports that 41 were killed and another 123 injured, according to its preliminary findings.

The blaze began after pro-Russian separatists clashed with activists partaking in a rally filled with supporters for a united Ukraine. The rival groups hurled cobblestones, smoke grenades and Molotov cocktails at each other.

A mob shouted "Glory to Ukraine" and "Death to enemies" as the building burned with people inside.

And it's hard not to agree with Ben Judah's conclusion here.
08:09 3.5.2014
More from our news desk on the release of the OSCE monitors.
A group of seven OSCE observers and their Ukrainian assistants who were being held by pro-Russian forces in the eastern Ukrainian town of Slovyansk have been freed.

Vladimir Lukin, a special envoy of Russian President Vladimir Putin, is quoted as saying on May 3 that "all 12 people on my list have been freed."

The team of observers was detained on April 25.

Meanwhile, Ukraine's Interior Ministry reports that Ukrainian forces have taken control of the airport and a television tower in the town of Kramatorsk.

The ministry's website said on May 3 that all checkpoints around the town are now under the control of Ukrainian troops.

Earlier, Interior Minister Arsen Avakov said military operations against pro-Russian separatists in the east resumed at dawn on May 3.
08:30 3.5.2014
BREAKING: Russian President Vladimir Putin has extended his "deep condolences" to the victims and families of those killed in the Odesa fire. Putin's spokesman, Dmitry Peskov, said Moscow has received thousands of requests for help from southeastern Ukraine. He said Moscow does not yet know how to respond to the growing violence in eastern Ukraine.
08:32 3.5.2014
08:47 3.5.2014
More on Russia's reaction to the violence and fire in Odesa yesterday:
A spokesman for Russian President Vladimir Putin is quoted as saying those who regard the "junta" in Kyiv as lawful are participants in the May 2 tragedy in Odesa.

Dmitry Peskov said Putin had extended his "deep condolences" to the victims and families of those killed in the Odesa fire.

More than 30 people -- many of them pro-Russian activists -- died in a fire in the southern port city on May 2. Some reports say Molotov cocktails had been thrown at the building.

Peskov also said Moscow "no longer has influence" over Russian speakers in eastern Ukraine.

Peskov said Moscow does not know how to respond to the growing violence and regrets the West's "approval" of the "punitive operation."

He also dismissed the idea that a presidential election can be held later this month as "absurd" given the violence.
09:18 3.5.2014
09:41 3.5.2014
09:56 3.5.2014
10:54 3.5.2014
BuzzFeed's Mike Giglio recounts his time in captivity in eastern Ukraine.
She decided to perform an interrogation on the prisoners, to determine that they were really who they claimed to be. The questions were basic, almost laughable, as if a regular person — which most of the captors certainly were — were trying hard to act like they thought a hostage-taker should.

To prove that I was a U.S. citizen as advertised, the woman asked me to name the U.S. capital, then to pronounce the word “garden.” I passed, but a British journalist wasn’t so lucky, receiving two stiff punches from one of the armed men when the English-speaking woman questioned the integrity of his accent. “Are you American?” the woman demanded of the poor man.
11:14 3.5.2014

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