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Series of Bombs hit 27 in Ukrainian city PDF Print E-mail

By Pavel Polityuk | Reuters

DNIPROPETROVSK, Ukraine (Reuters) - Four bombs exploded in a city in
eastern Ukraine on Friday, wounding 27 people, including nine children,
in what authorities described as an "act of terrorism".

President Viktor Yanukovich said the blasts in Dnipropetrovsk, six weeks
before Ukraine plays host to the European soccer championship,
represented "a challenge ... to the whole country."

Bomb attacks are a rare occurrence in the former Soviet republic and the
blasts one after the other traumatised people in the city, one of
Ukraine's main industrial centres with a population of around 1.3 million.

"I had just stepped out of my house when I saw people run down the
street screaming 'Explosions!'," said 50-year-old local journalist Tetyana.

"There is panic in the city. People are taking their children out of
schools and rushing to their homes," she said.

Police said the bombs had been left in rubbish bins at various points in
the city. "No-one has been detained yet," a police spokesman said.

Authorities offered no immediate explanation on who may be responsible.
But the prosecutor general's office formally opened a criminal case
classifying the blasts as an "act of terrorism".

Prime Minister Mykola Azarov said the attacks could be exploited by his
government's critics. "It plays into the hand of the forces that want to
destabilise the situation in the country ..." he wrote on his Facebook page.

Dnipropetrovsk, 400 km (250 miles) southeast of the capital Kiev, is not
one of the four Ukrainian cities where Euro-2012 soccer tournament
matches will be played.

But the bomb blasts will unsettle Ukrainian authorities who have
expressed confidence they will be able to provide full security for the
tens of thousands of European soccer fans expected to converge on the
country in June and July.

"I think the people who committed this brutal crime... are also
accomplices to an attack on the image of our country ahead of the
Euro-2012," Ukrainian football federation head Hryhory Surkis said in a
statement.

Interior Minister Vitaly Zakharchenko immediately left for
Dnipropetrovsk and ordered extra internal troops to the city to boost
regular police. Parliament went into emergency session.

UEFA, European soccer's governing body, said it remained confident in
the Ukrainian authorities' ability to stage a "smooth and festive
tournament" despite the bombings.

POLITICAL TENSION

The first blast occurred at a tram stop at 11:50 a.m. (0850 GMT),
wounding 13 people and shattering the windows of a nearby tram and car.

The second explosion came 30 minutes later next to a cinema, injuring 11
people, nine of them children, the Emergencies Ministry said in a statement.

The third blast followed shortly afterwards next to a park, injuring 2
people, it said. The fourth explosion, close to the site of the first
one, caused no casualties, said the ministry whose estimate of injuries
was lower than that of police.

Very few people could be seen on the street where the first and the
fourth blasts took place and which residents say was usually lively on a
Friday night.

Shrapnel from one of the explosions tore off pieces of bark from nearby
trees at heights where it could also hit a human.

"Nothing like this has happened before," said Volodymyr Klitchko, 23.
"Dnipropetrovsk used to be a quiet city."

Outside of the city, policemen wearing bulletproof vests and armed with
Kalashnikov assault rifles stopped cars for checks.

Dnipropetrovsk is one of the former Soviet republic's biggest industrial
hubs and was a key centre of the nuclear, arms and space industries in
Soviet times.

It provided a springboard for former President Leonid Kuchma, who was in
office from 1994-2005, to rise to power. It is also the birthplace of
jailed opposition leader Yulia Tymoshenko.

Political tension is high in the country because of the detention of
Tymoshenko who was jailed for seven years last October for alleged
abuse-of-office which she denies.

Her imprisonment has prompted sharp criticism from Western governments
which see her trial as political revenge by Yanukovich, who narrowly
beat her for the presidency in February 2010.

Ukraine's neighbour, Russia, offered to help the authorities investigate
the bombings. Poland, another neighbour and Ukraine's co-host of
Euro-2012, said the bombings were an exceptional event.

"We have to treat the issue very seriously, not only because it's a
tragedy, we've heard about casualties, many people wounded," Polish
Prime Minister Donald Tusk told reporters.

"Any attack in our region is something rather exceptional, and I think
we can talk of an attack at this point, while the context of the Euro
2012 makes us especially sensitive to such events."

(Reporting by Pavel Polityuk, Olzhas Auyezov and Natalya Zinets;
Additional reporting by Maciej Onoszko in Warsaw; Editing by Myra MacDonald)


 
 


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