Friday, February 28, 2014

Obama frames populist theme for Dems in 2014 - news9.com KWTV

By JOSH LEDERMAN

Associated Press

WASHINGTON (AP) - Striking a decidedly partisan tone, President Barack Obama sought Friday to define this year's elections as a stark choice between Republicans pushing failed policies from a bygone era and Democrats advocating freedom and opportunity for all Americans.


Rallying the party faithful at a Democratic National Committee summit, Obama rattled off a list of issues where he said Republicans were stuck in the past: gay rights, women's equality, wages and health care, to name a few. Driving the midterm election campaigns across the country this year, he said, is a fundamental disagreement between the parties about the best way to secure America's future.


"What they are offering is not a new theory," Obama said, asserting that Republicans had advocated the same policies in the run-up to the Great Depression, the recent recession and the 2012 election. "And the American people said, "No, thanks.'"


In a boisterous speech, Obama seized the opportunity to mock Republicans - to the delight of the Democratic officials, donors and activists who packed a hotel ballroom near the White House. While acknowledging early setbacks in rolling out his health care law, Obama ridiculed his political foes for trying time and again to repeal the law.


"You know what they say: Fiftieth time is the charm," Obama said to laughter. "Maybe when you hit your 50th repeal vote you will win a prize."


Riffing on women's rights and the GOP, Obama quipped: "This isn't 1954. It's 2014."


Such partisan rhetoric from the president had the desired effect of revving up members of his party, some of whom are openly fretting that the unpopular health law, Obama's low approval ratings and historical trends could all work in Republicans' favor this year.


But it also served as a clear reminder that the encroaching election, with all the political posturing it will bring, augers poorly for anything Obama wants to accomplish with Congress this year. After all, 2014 offers Obama potentially the last opportunity to secure legislative achievements before attention turns to the 2016 presidential election and Obama's successor.


"Obviously, this is an election year. But an election that's eight months away shouldn't stop us from making progress right now," Obama said, echoing his State of the Union refrain that he'll work with Congress whenever possible but will act unilaterally to expand economic opportunity however he can.


In an effort to show the president was fully committed to bolstering his party's cause, the White House said Obama was actively looking for ways to help.


Obama has committed to hold nearly three dozen fundraisers for Democratic political committees by the middle of 2014 - including an eye-popping 18 events for the DNC, whose millions of dollars of lingering debt more than a year after the last presidential election has Democrats fretting.


In a twist from previous midterms, Obama will even headline fundraisers for super PACs, which he once disparaged but has more recently embraced, arguing Democrats mustn't be steamrolled by GOP outside groups even if the flood of largely unregulated donations leaves a bitter taste for those who hunger for cleaner American elections.


And as Democratic incumbents seek to position themselves for the election, Obama's aides are working with Democratic leaders in the Senate and House to coordinate votes that will bolster the themes they'll be pressing during the campaign, said a White House official, who would speak only on condition of anonymity to discuss internal Democratic deliberations. Obama also plans to do what he can to boost Democratic turnout, while his campaign's vaunted voter data and technology will be made available to all 2014 candidates, the official said.


At the DNC's winter meeting, Obama said that numerically, if Democrats show up at the polls in full force, their candidates will succeed. "When Democrats vote, we win," he said. But he warned that Republicans are counting on traditionally low turnout by Democrats in midterm years.


Urging Democrats not to cede the argument on issues where they believe Americans are on their side, Obama pointed to recent legislation in Arizona that was trumpeted as promoting religious freedom but criticized by others as discriminating against gays. He said Democrats know that freedom means being able to shop in a store or restaurant without being discriminated against based on who you are or who you love.


"As Democrats, we've let the other side define the word 'freedom' for too long," Obama said.


Republican National Committee Reince Priebus said Americans are still waiting for the opportunity and jobs that Obama keeps talking about. He pointed to Obama's proposed minimum wage hike and health care law as examples of policies that do nothing to help Americans who are out of work.


"Maybe it's time to give up on the speeches that include a lot of promises but not a lot of action," Priebus said.


___


Follow Josh Lederman on Twitter: http://ift.tt/MJRGf2


Copyright 2014 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.









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Obama warns Putin against military intervention in Ukraine - Reuters




WASHINGTON Fri Feb 28, 2014 7:32pm EST



U.S. President Barack Obama delivers remarks on the situation in Ukraine from the press briefing room at the White House in Washington, February 28, 2014. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst

U.S. President Barack Obama delivers remarks on the situation in Ukraine from the press briefing room at the White House in Washington, February 28, 2014.


Credit: Reuters/Jonathan Ernst





WASHINGTON (Reuters) - President Barack Obama warned Russia on Friday that military intervention in Ukraine would lead to "costs," as tension with old foe President Vladimir Putin rose in a Cold War-style crisis.



"We are now deeply concerned by reports of military movements taken by the Russian Federation inside of Ukraine," he told reporters.



Obama and European leaders would consider skipping a G8 summit this summer in the Russian city of Sochi if Moscow intervenes militarily in Ukraine, a senior U.S. official said. The G8 includes the world's seven leading industrial nations and Russia.



"The United States will stand with the international community in affirming that there will be costs for any military intervention in Ukraine," Obama said in the White House briefing room.



Facing yet another confrontation with Putin after butting heads with him over Syria, Obama said any violation of Ukraine's sovereignty and territorial integrity would be "deeply destabilizing."



Obama did not spell out what he meant by Russian military intervention.



Russia has a huge naval base in Ukraine's Crimea Peninsula and says it has the right to move troops in Ukraine under an agreement between the two former Soviet neighbors.



U.S. officials said they saw indications of Russian troop movements into Crimea but that their numbers and intentions were unclear.



The crisis has presented Obama with a difficult challenge days after pro-Western protesters prompted Viktor Yanukovich, Ukraine's pro-Moscow president, to flee to Russia.



Armed men took control of two airports in the Crimea region in what the new Ukrainian leadership described as an invasion by Moscow's forces, and Yanukovich surfaced in Russia a week after he fled Kiev.



Ukraine fell into political crisis last year when Yanukovich spurned a broad trade deal with the European Union and accepted a $15 billion Russian bailout that is now in question.



A U.S. response to any Russian intervention in Ukraine could include avoiding deeper trade and commerce ties that Moscow is seeking, the senior U.S. official said.



Steven Pifer, a former U.S. ambassador to Ukraine now at the Brookings Institution think tank, said it was inconceivable that the United States would consider a military response were Russia to seek to gain control of Crimea, and that it had few plausible options to oppose such a move.



"If you look at the U.S.-Russian relationship, what kinds of things could we do to punish them? There are not a lot of good levers there," he added.



Putin has proved immune to U.S. calls for Moscow to stop supporting Syria's government in its three-year-old civil war. And the United States was unable to prevent Putin from staging Russian incursions into neighboring Georgia in 2008.



IMF SEES NO PANIC



In the struggle between the West and Russia for influence in Ukraine, both sides are wielding money.



Putin last year offered $15 billion for Kiev, $3 billion of which has been delivered, in what was widely seen as a reward for Yanukovich's turning away from the EU deal.



Now, support from the Washington-based International Monetary Fund is seen as critical to shoring up Ukraine's collapsing finances. The United States and the EU say they are willing to provide funds alongside an IMF program.



Russia also supports the fund's involvement, and an IMF team is set to arrive in Kiev early next week to collect information and start working on a loan program.



But IMF Managing Director Christine Lagarde on Friday suggested there was no rush to help Ukraine, which says it needs $35 billion over two years to avoid default and may need $4 billion immediately.



"We do not see anything that is critical, that is worthy of panic at the moment," Lagarde told reporters. "We would certainly hope that the (Ukrainian) authorities refrain from throwing lots of numbers which are really meaningless until they've been assessed properly."



U.S. lawmakers are hammering out details of an assistance package for Ukraine. Senator Chris Murphy, chairman of a Senate subcommittee on European affairs, said the package would be part of a broader, coordinated program with the EU, the IMF and other international partners.



"I encourage the new government to implement the necessary economic reforms to stabilize the economy and set Ukraine on a path to prosperity, including rooting out corruption and increasing transparency in government finances," Murphy said.



Republican Senator John McCain, a long-time Putin critic, said diplomatic and economic sanctions could be imposed. But he told CNN that Putin does not fear the United States.



(Additional reporting By Matt Spetalnick; Arshad Mohammed, Lesley Wroughton, Patricia Zengerle, Mark Felsenthal and Jeff Mason; Editing by Alistair Bell and Mohammad Zargham)












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Dead wrong: Man in body bag kicks to get out - Milwaukee Journal Sentinel




Lexington, Miss. — A funeral director and coroner got the shock of their lives this week when a man put in a body bag because he was believed to be dead kicked to get out just before the embalming process was begun.


"He was not dead, long story short," funeral director Byron Porter told TV station WAPT.


The man, 78-year-old Walter Williams, had been pronounced dead at 9 p.m. Wednesday after Coroner Dexter Howard arrived at his home in Lexington and found no pulse. Williams was then taken to Porter and Sons Funeral Home.


"I stood there and watched them put him in a body bag and zip it up," Williams' nephew, Eddie Hester, told WAPT.


Early Thursday, workers at the funeral home were preparing to embalm Williams when he started to kick in the body bag.


Family members were called, and Williams was taken to a hospital. Howard said he believes that Williams' pacemaker stopped working, then started again.


His daughter Mary said Williams, a farmer who was nicknamed "Snowball" because he was born during a rare Mississippi snowstorm, was in stable condition Friday and had been talking with family members. "He said he thought he was asleep," she said. "Then he woke up in the hospital. He doesn't remember any of it, really."




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President Obama blunt in warning Russia not to intervene in Ukraine - Los Angeles Times

WASHINGTON — President Obama issued a blunt warning to Moscow on Friday that "there will be costs" if Russia sends its troops into Ukraine, saying he is deeply concerned about reports of Russian military movements in the region.



Obama told a hastily convened White House press gathering that Russian military action would violate international law and "would be deeply destabilizing, which is not in the interests of Ukraine, Russia or Europe. It would represent a profound interference in matters that must be determined by the Ukrainian people."


Authorities in Ukraine closed airspace over the Crimean peninsula late Friday and reports indicated that multiple Russian transport planes had landed at a military air strip near Simferopol, Crimea's regional capital. Officials said flights to and from the commercial airport were canceled late Friday as well.


Ukrainian media reported disruptions "by unknown persons" of telephone and Internet communications, and said gunmen had surrounded a television station. Ukraine's acting president accused Russia of trying to seize the territory, a semi-autonomous region of Ukraine that is important to Russia for historical and strategic reasons.


Russia leases the Crimean port of Sevastopol, the longtime headquarters of its Black Sea fleet. The region's population is dominated by ethnic Russians.


The tension over Crimea could affect U.S. cooperation with Russia on the Syrian civil war, the international effort to negotiate a nuclear deal with Iran and other issues. The White House has been cautious regarding Ukraine in part because conflict with Russia could disrupt collaboration on other major problems.


Obama did not say what the United States will do — or can do — to head off Ukraine's threatened slide toward renewed civil conflict and a possible breakup as pro-Russia militants push for secession in Crimea. But he suggested that there would be some sort of international action if Russia intervened.


"Just days after the world came to Russia for the Olympic Games, it would invite the condemnation of nations around the world," Obama said. "And indeed, the United States will stand with the international community in affirming that there will be costs for any military intervention in Ukraine."


Russia is scheduled to host a meeting of the Group of Eight industrial nations in Sochi in June. That now may be in jeopardy.


Vice President Joe Biden spoke with Ukraine's prime minister by phone to promise U.S. support, White House advisors said. The president has directed his aides to coordinate with European allies and to communicate directly with Russian President Vladimir Putin's government, the advisors said.


Washington and its European allies have an untested relationship with the fragile new pro-Western government in Kiev, Ukraine's capital. They have even less influence over the armed men who have seized government buildings in Simferopol, or their presumed backers in the Kremlin, which is determined not to lose its only foreign naval base in Crimea.


"We're watching the unfolding of a nightmare scenario that people have worried about since the breakup of the Soviet Union" in 1991, said Andrew S. Weiss, an expert on Russia and Ukraine who served in the George H.W. Bush and Bill Clinton administrations.


"Putin's key goal has been to try to establish that 'Russia's back,'" said Weiss. "Now it looks like you're reckoning with a Russia that is acting … in a very dangerous way."


The West's greatest point of leverage, a promised multibillion-dollar bailout to help Ukraine's economy avoid collapse, faces resistance in Congress and in financially strained European capitals.


"There's no political will," said Eugene Rumer, who until December was the U.S. national intelligence officer for Russia and the region.


Acting Ukrainian President Oleksandr Turchynov said Russia was trying to seize territory in Crimea and "provoke us to a military conflict."


Turchynov's representative in Crimea, Sergei Kunitsin, later said in televised remarks that 13 Russian jumbo jets landed at Gvardeyskoye, near Simferopol, carrying an estimated 2,000 Russian paratroopers.


The moves appeared intended to demonstrate the Kremlin's determination to secure its port at Sevastopol, from which Russian naval might is projected to the world.


Kiev retains control over Ukrainian military forces in the western and central areas of the country, and even most Russian-leaning areas in the east have refrained from defying the new government.


But troops in Crimea may not be reliable in the face of the local population's rejection of Kiev's authority. With pro-Russia gunmen at airports and communications centers, it was unclear whether Kiev could bring in forces to challenge any Russian buildup.









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Rain soaks California causing floods, but won't end drought - Reuters




SACRAMENTO, California Sat Mar 1, 2014 1:12am EST







1 of 2. Tourists wearing rain gear stand next to Oscar statues covered with plastic during preparations for the 86th Academy Awards at the Dolby Theatre in Hollywood, California February 28, 2014.


Credit: Reuters/Mario Anzuoni





SACRAMENTO, California (Reuters) - A large winter storm brought much-needed relief to parched California on Friday, boosting depleted reservoirs and the Sierra Nevada's mountain snowpack, but officials said the precipitation would be too little to offset years of drought.



The heavy rains also prompted flash flood warnings across much of Southern California and posed a particular threat to foothill communities where recent wildfires stripped vegetation from large areas, leaving homes below vulnerable to potential mudslides.



Mandatory evacuations were in effect on Friday for more than 1,200 homes in some slide-prone areas east of Los Angeles, where sandbags were stacked around driveways and miles of concrete barriers were lined up along the streets to channel heavy hillside runoff away from houses.



The downpours even posed challenges to crews preparing for Sunday night's Oscar ceremony in Hollywood, soaking parts of the newly installed red carpet.



California is in its third year of a dry spell that may break all records in the most populous U.S. state, where lawmakers on Thursday swiftly passed a series of drought relief proposals to Governor Jerry Brown for his signature. President Barack Obama has also pledged millions of dollars in aid.



Friday's storm, and a smaller band of showers on Wednesday, came as a welcome break in California's relentlessly dry weather but will do little to significantly ease the state's water crisis.



"Despite these recent storms, it would still have to rain every other day until around May to reach average precipitation totals, and even then we would still be in a drought due to the last two dry years," said Richard Stapler, spokesman for the California Natural Resources Agency.



Brown declared a drought emergency last month and has called on state officials to prepare for water shortages and to develop solutions for potentially long-term dry weather.



Officials have said that California farmers facing drastic cutbacks in irrigation water are expected to idle half a million acres of cropland this year in a record production loss that could cause billions of dollars in economic damage.



Moderate to heavy rainfall across Southern and Central California on Friday was expected to taper off by Saturday afternoon, the National Weather Service said.



The coastal town of Oxnard, just north of Los Angeles, received nearly 2 inches of rain by late afternoon, the highest precipitation measured anywhere in the United States during the day, according to the weather service.



ROCK SLIDES AND RIVER RESCUES



Rain and high winds caused road closures and power outages across Southern California and brought enough snow that tire chains were required for driving on mountain roads near the Nevada border.



In Los Angeles, 14,000 customers were without power by mid-morning. People were soaked as high winds turned umbrellas inside out and drove the rain nearly sideways as they waited for buses and light rail trains.



Near Malibu, crews worked to clear debris from the Pacific Coast Highway north of the affluent seaside city after rock slides prompted officials to shut down a 10-mile (16-km) stretch of the scenic road.



Patrick Chandler, a spokesman for the California Department of Transportation, said a large wildfire in the area last year had weakened the stability of hillsides in the area.



"A lot of times, when you have rain in this area, especially with the drought, you're going to have a lot of loose rocks coming down," Chandler said.



Later Friday, the agency closed the Angeles Crest Highway in the San Gabriel Mountains northeast of Los Angeles after another rockslide made the road impassable. Several recreation areas in the Angeles National Forest also were closed.



By noon, there had been 158 vehicle crashes in the Los Angeles area, 112 more than the previous Friday, according to the California Highway Patrol.



Firefighters rescued two homeless people who had climbed with their dogs into trees to escape swiftly rising water flowing down the Los Angeles River near their encampment, and another man was plucked to safety from another spot along the river later in the day, a fire department spokesman said.



Air traffic was also affected at Los Angeles International Airport, where 19 incoming and outgoing flights were cancelled on Friday morning, officials said.



In northern California, about 13,000 customers lost power in the San Francisco Bay Area and the wine-making Sonoma County, said Jason King, a spokesman for the Pacific Gas & Electric utility company.



Although many of those households and businesses had their power restored by early afternoon, the company expected additional outages to occur on Friday night as the rainy and windy weather continued, King said.



(Additional reporting by Laila Kearney in San Francisco and Steve Gorman and Dan Whitcomb in Los Angeles; Editing by Cynthia Johnson, Grant McCool and Lisa Shumaker)












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Dead Mississippi man begins breathing in embalming room, coroner says - CNN





  • Mississippi man declared dead Wednesday, returns to life Thursday, coroner says

  • "We noticed his legs beginning to move ... He also began to do a little breathing"

  • Family overjoyed that the longtime farmer known as "Snowball" is still with them

  • Coroner says only explanation is that man's defibrillator kick-started his heart




(CNN) -- Even in the Bible Belt, coroners don't use the word "miracle" lightly.


But Holmes County, Mississippi, Coroner Dexter Howard has no qualms using the word for the resurrection, as it were, of Walter Williams, who was declared dead Wednesday night.


Howard received the call from Williams' hospice nurse, who told Howard that the 87-year-old had passed away. A family member called as well, saying the same, Howard said.


Howard and Byron Porter from Porter & Sons Funeral Home in Lexington, Mississippi, drove to Williams' home to collect the body for funeral preparations. Howard checked Williams' pulse about 9 p.m. and pronounced him dead.


"There was no pulse. He was lifeless," Howard said.


The coroner completed his paperwork, placed Williams in a body bag and transported him to the funeral home, he said. There, something strange happened: The body bag moved.


"We got him into the embalming room and we noticed his legs beginning to move, like kicking," Howard said. "He also began to do a little breathing."


They immediately called an ambulance. Paramedics arrived and hooked Williams up to monitors. Sure enough, he had a heartbeat, so they transported him to the Holmes County Hospital and Clinics.


"They were in shock. I was in shock. I think everybody at the hospital was in shock," Howard said.


Neither in the 12 years as county coroner nor during his decade as deputy coroner has Howard seen anything like it. Howard was absolutely certain Williams was dead.


The only reasonable explanation he could think of, Howard said, is that Williams' defibrillator, implanted beneath the skin on his chest, jump-started his heart after he was placed in the body bag.


"It could've kicked in, started his heart back," Howard said. "The bottom line is it's a miracle."


Overjoyed family members are thanking God for saving the life of the longtime farmer they call "Snowball."


"So it was not my daddy's time," daughter Martha Lewis told CNN affiliate WJTV. "I don't know how much longer he's going to grace us and bless us with his presence, but hallelujah, we thank Him right now!"


Nephew Eddie Hester told CNN affiliate WAPT he was at Williams' Lexington home when Howard and Porter zipped up the body bag, so he was more than a little stunned when his cousin called at 2:30 a.m. Thursday and told him, "Not yet."


"What you mean not yet?" Hester recalled asking his cousin. "He said, 'Daddy's still here.' "


"I don't know how long he's going to be here, but I know he's back right now. That's all that matters," Hester told WAPT.


Howard visited Williams on Thursday at the hospital and said he was still "a little weak" but was surrounded by family members and talking.


Mike Murphy, the coroner for Clark County, Nevada, and past president of the International Association of Coroners and Medical Examiners, said he couldn't comment on this specific case without knowing all the details, but he's read news reports of people returning to life at funeral homes "from time to time."


Asked if he'd ever heard of a case in which a defibrillator played a role in bringing someone back to life, Murphy said he hadn't, "but just because I haven't heard it doesn't mean it hasn't happened."









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Ukrainian Ex-President Speaks Out From Russia - New York Times

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Ukraine’s deposed president, Viktor F. Yanukovych, gave a news conference in Rostov-on-Don, Russia, the first time he has publicly appeared since fleeing the violence in Kiev. Credit Pavel Golovkin/Associated Press


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ROSTOV-ON-DON, Russia — Ukraine’s humiliated fugitive president appeared at a shopping center here on Friday to declare himself the country’s lawful leader, calling on President Vladimir V. Putin to act but vowing to oppose military intervention by Russia or anyone else. He spoke hours after mysterious Russian-speaking gunmen took up positions around two airports in Crimea, prompting Ukraine’s new leaders to announce that an intervention had already begun.


After weeks of popular protests, warlike violence, fear, grief and jubilation, Ukraine̢۪s political crisis descended on Friday into an absurd, if ominous, swirl of confusion that only heightened the crisis facing a country on the brink of economic and political collapse.


Even as frantic reports circulated that Russia had already intervened decisively in Crimea, Mr. Putin held a series of telephone conversations with European leaders in which he agreed, according to a British account of his conversation with Prime Minister David Cameron, to Ukraine̢۪s holding new presidential elections in May, suggesting that the Kremlin was resigned to a new leadership there to replace the ousted, pro-Russian president, Viktor F. Yanukovych.


“I think any military action is unacceptable,” Mr. Yanukovych said at a news conference here, appearing in public for the first time in a week, since he signed an agreement with Ukraine’s opposition leaders ending months of protests that took a violent and deadly turn last week in Kiev, killing dozens. “I have no intention to ask for military support. I think Ukraine should remain one indivisible country.”


Mr. Yanukovych vowed to return to power, however improbable that now seems, given the erosion of his political support, even among Russia’s leadership and his former allies in Ukraine, including his long-serving press secretary, who gave an unflattering interview published Friday. Sergey Tigipko, a former deputy prime minister and still influential member of Parliament, said that he was not interested in what Mr. Yanukovych had to say. Asked if Mr. Yanukovych was still the legitimate president, Mr. Tigipko answered tersely: “No.”



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    With Military Moves Seen in Ukraine, Obama Warns RussiaFEB. 28, 2014




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    2 Ukrainian Mayors Play Different Hands in Crisis FEB. 28, 2014




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    Crimea̢۪s Bloody Past Is a Key to Its PresentFEB. 27, 2014




Mr. Yanukovych, sharply dressed in a suit, denounced the new interim leaders in Ukraine̢۪s capital as fascists whose actions had been abetted by the West, and said the legal moves they had taken since he fled Kiev a week ago had no standing. Among those, he said, was the resolution stripping him of his authority because he effectively abandoned his presidency.


“Nobody deposed me,” he said, speaking in Russian. “I had to leave Ukraine because there was a direct and imminent threat to my life.” He called for a restoration of the government that he led.


He said that the warlike events in Crimea — including the seizure of the region’s capital on Thursday and reports that the airspace had been closed — were a natural reaction to what he called a gangster coup in Kiev by violent nationalists. He said they had intimidated lawmakers and created the upheaval that forced him to leave shortly after signing the agreement, brokered by three European foreign ministers, that had been intended as a peaceful road map for ending the crisis. “The people of Crimea don’t want to submit, and they will not submit,” he said.


Mr. Putin̢۪s strategy remains unclear. On Friday, the Kremlin announced that he had told his ministers to continue contacts with their counterparts in Ukraine regarding trade and economic ties and that he would work with the International Monetary Fund and other countries to organize aid. He also pledged to respond to appeals from Crimea for humanitarian aid. But Mr. Putin has yet to make public remarks about the crisis in Ukraine since Mr. Yanukovych fled Kiev, though other officials have echoed Mr. Yanukovych̢۪s remarks that the transition was illegal.



Mr. Yanukovych, referring to Russia’s leader formally and respectfully by his full name and patronymic, said he was surprised, “knowing the character of Vladimir Vladimirovich Putin,” that he had so far maintained a studied silence on the events. “I believe that Russia must and is obliged to act,” he said.


He did not say how, though. “It would be inappropriate for me at this point for me to say what Russia should do,” he added when pressed again later. “Russia should not remain indifferent and do nothing.”


Mr. Yanukovych̢۪s appearance here in Rostov-on-Don, a city only a couple of hours̢۪ drive from his political stronghold in eastern Ukraine, added to the surreal quality of his fall from power. He insisted he had not fled Kiev but left for a planned meeting with party activists in Kharkiv, a city in eastern Ukraine. And yet he claimed his convoy had come under fire as he left Kiev.


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Yanukovych Speaks Out After Ouster


Viktor F. Yanukovych appeared in public for the first time since he was ousted as Ukraine̢۪s president. He spoke in Russian and said he would not give up the fight for his country̢۪s future.


From Kharkiv, he traveled to Donetsk and then tried to go to Luhansk, only to be warned by Ukraine’s air force that his entourage risked crossing Russia’s border. By his account, he then drove overland to Crimea — at which point he became vague. He declined, when asked directly, to say how and when he arrived in Russia. “I got into Russia thanks to patriotic officers,” he said. “That’s what I would say. They did what they had to do.”


Unconfirmed reports by Russian news agencies said he had arrived in Moscow several days ago, but he did not address those. He said he had spoken with Mr. Putin by telephone after arriving on Russian soil but had not met him personally.


Tellingly, he held his news conference, organized by Russia̢۪s Itar-Tass news agency, not in Moscow nor in a government building here but in the Vertol Expo center, a new shopping mall, hotel and convention center a fair distance from the city̢۪s center. Inside and outside were exhibitions of tractors and other farm equipment. It was not clear when he might return to Ukraine to assert his claim to the presidency, even as he said he would not seek to run again when new elections are held.


Speaking to scores of reporters for more than an hour, he faced pointed questions that underscored how improbable his return seemed. When asked why he was in Rostov-on-Don, and not in Ukraine, he replied that he had sought temporary shelter from a close friend in the city because of the danger in Ukraine. Another journalist asked about his lavish residence in Mezhigorye, which protesters and activists descended upon after his flight, gawking at the evidence of personal indulgence and political intrigue, including documents suggesting corruption and lists of enemies.


Mr. Yanukovych did not directly address the zoo, the greenhouses, the golf course or the wooden ship that served as a private restaurant, except to say that there were other owners of parts of the estate whose lawyers would soon be in touch with officials in Kiev to reclaim their properties. He did not name the other owners. “I don’t own anything, and I’ve never had accounts abroad,” he said. “I’m a public person. Everything I have, everything, was declared.”


At the estate, several protesters added to his indignity by watching his remarks on one of his own big-screen televisions, sitting on plush leather sofas in one of the mansions. They scoffed at his claims and heckled the screen when he protested that he had lived in one modest structure.


In Rostov-on-Don, Andrei Kolesnikov, a prominent journalist from the Russian newspaper Kommersant, asked Mr. Yanukovych if he was ashamed of anything that he had done.


“I can tell you, I am ashamed,” Mr. Yanukovych replied. “What’s more, I would like to apologize,” he went on, mentioning veterans in particular, “for the fact that I did not have enough strength to achieve stability and let this lawlessness occur.”



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Major storm brings needed rain to LA, but at a cost - Los Angeles Times

A potent storm gave Southern California a more thorough soaking on Friday than it has seen in more than three years, bringing both cheers in a drought-stricken state and anxiety as it sent mud billowing through hillside neighborhoods and clogged roads.



Downtown Los Angeles saw more rain by Friday afternoon — 1.7 inches — than it had seen during the entire rest of the "rain year," starting last July.


For some, it was a harrowing day — for two drivers who were rescued after getting trapped by a rock slide near Malibu; for two men rescued from a downed tree in the suddenly roiling Los Angeles River; for hundreds who lost electricity when a power pole toppled over near a Long Beach police station.


Authorities recorded scores of traffic accidents, including a pileup of three tractor-trailers on Interstate 10 near Cabazon. At least 32,500 customers were without power at some point on Friday. More than 5 inches of rain had fallen in the San Gabriel Mountains, and authorities recorded a wind gust of 76 mph. Several important thoroughfares were closed, such as the Ortega Highway, which connects Riverside and Orange counties and was shut down after it became caked with mud and rocks.


The storm walloped the entire state; in San Jose, drivers abandoned vehicles in flooded streets, and near Palo Alto, a man was pulled from a raging creek near a homeless encampment and treated for hypothermia.


"And we're not done," said Bill Patzert, a climatologist at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in La Cañada Flintridge. "We'll get hit again."


Indeed, as the meager daylight began to fade on Friday, a fresh, powerful band of rain began to lash the region anew, inundating roads that already had standing water and hillsides that were already doused.


According to the National Weather Service, a strong low-pressure storm system poised off the coast will move inland over the course of the weekend, bringing as much as 3 inches of rain to the coast and as much as 10 inches in some mountain areas. Winds, too, will be powerful; some inland portions of San Bernardino, Riverside and San Diego counties could see gusts of 65 mph or more.


Most pressingly, perhaps, the storm was by no means over for hundreds of families that had been asked to evacuate from foothill communities beneath the burn areas of nearby wildfires.


Most were in the foothill communities of Glendora and Azusa, east of Pasadena and in the shadows of the Angeles National Forest. There, an illegal campfire erupted into a 2,000-acre blaze in January, destroying five homes — and leaving thousands of homes exposed to danger beneath denuded slopes.


Percolating anxiety burst into the open at a public meeting Friday afternoon, when a sheet of rain splashed against a library in Glendora. "That's a microburst! That's what we don't want!" a man yelled. "This could be bad," another said.


Authorities, fearing that homes could be overrun and inundated with mud and debris, issued evacuation orders for about 1,000 homes, and an additional 200 homes in the nearby city of Monrovia. But in some areas, residents estimated that as many as three-quarters of homeowners had rejected the "mandatory" evacuation and elected to stay put, a decision that did not please fire and rescue officials.


"Understand this: If there is mud coming down, fire personnel cannot get to you," warned Steve Martin of the Los Angeles County Fire Department. "There's a reason for these evacuations."


By nightfall Friday, authorities in the area had recorded no injuries or damage to homes. But, said Glendora Police Chief Tim Staab: "We've got a long way to go."


Larry Davis, 69, whose home is perched on high ground at Sierra Madre Avenue and Hicrest Road in Glendora, was among those asked to evacuate. Davis said he figured that his high street curb and a wall surrounding his home would keep the mud flow away.


"I wasn't worried," he said. "I just felt we were going to be OK.... I think some 25% decided to leave. I decided to join the 75%."


Then he opened his garage door Friday morning as he was preparing to take his grandson to school. Already, water was flowing down the road, and building up at a nearby intersection where a drainage opening was clogging up.


"I thought: 'Uh-oh. We're stuck,'" he said. "I thought there was going to be some flooding, but I think this turned out a lot worse than what I thought."


By late morning, 2 feet of mud had accumulated by his house, creeping halfway up his driveway.


"I think it's going to be OK," he said. He knew, he said, more rain was moving in. "You can think about the inevitable. But I try not to."









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President Obama blunt in warning Russia not to intervene in Ukraine - Los Angeles Times

WASHINGTON — President Obama issued a blunt warning to Moscow on Friday that "there will be costs" if Russia sends its troops into Ukraine, saying he is deeply concerned about reports of Russian military movements in the region.



Obama told a hastily convened White House press gathering that Russian military action would violate international law and "would be deeply destabilizing, which is not in the interests of Ukraine, Russia or Europe. It would represent a profound interference in matters that must be determined by the Ukrainian people."


Authorities in Ukraine closed airspace over the Crimean peninsula late Friday and reports indicated that multiple Russian transport planes had landed at a military air strip near Simferopol, Crimea's regional capital. Officials said flights to and from the commercial airport were canceled late Friday as well.


Ukrainian media reported disruptions "by unknown persons" of telephone and Internet communications, and said gunmen had surrounded a television station. Ukraine's acting president accused Russia of trying to seize the territory, a semi-autonomous region of Ukraine that is important to Russia for historical and strategic reasons.


Russia leases the Crimean port of Sevastopol, the longtime headquarters of its Black Sea fleet. The region's population is dominated by ethnic Russians.


The tension over Crimea could affect U.S. cooperation with Russia on the Syrian civil war, the international effort to negotiate a nuclear deal with Iran and other issues. The White House has been cautious regarding Ukraine in part because conflict with Russia could disrupt collaboration on other major problems.


Obama did not say what the United States will do — or can do — to head off Ukraine's threatened slide toward renewed civil conflict and a possible breakup as pro-Russia militants push for secession in Crimea. But he suggested that there would be some sort of international action if Russia intervened.


"Just days after the world came to Russia for the Olympic Games, it would invite the condemnation of nations around the world," Obama said. "And indeed, the United States will stand with the international community in affirming that there will be costs for any military intervention in Ukraine."


Russia is scheduled to host a meeting of the Group of Eight industrial nations in Sochi in June. That now may be in jeopardy.


Vice President Joe Biden spoke with Ukraine's prime minister by phone to promise U.S. support, White House advisors said. The president has directed his aides to coordinate with European allies and to communicate directly with Russian President Vladimir Putin's government, the advisors said.


Washington and its European allies have an untested relationship with the fragile new pro-Western government in Kiev, Ukraine's capital. They have even less influence over the armed men who have seized government buildings in Simferopol, or their presumed backers in the Kremlin, which is determined not to lose its only foreign naval base in Crimea.


"We're watching the unfolding of a nightmare scenario that people have worried about since the breakup of the Soviet Union" in 1991, said Andrew S. Weiss, an expert on Russia and Ukraine who served in the George H.W. Bush and Bill Clinton administrations.


"Putin's key goal has been to try to establish that 'Russia's back,'" said Weiss. "Now it looks like you're reckoning with a Russia that is acting … in a very dangerous way."


The West's greatest point of leverage, a promised multibillion-dollar bailout to help Ukraine's economy avoid collapse, faces resistance in Congress and in financially strained European capitals.


"There's no political will," said Eugene Rumer, who until December was the U.S. national intelligence officer for Russia and the region.


Acting Ukrainian President Oleksandr Turchynov said Russia was trying to seize territory in Crimea and "provoke us to a military conflict."


Turchynov's representative in Crimea, Sergei Kunitsin, later said in televised remarks that 13 Russian jumbo jets landed at Gvardeyskoye, near Simferopol, carrying an estimated 2,000 Russian paratroopers.


The moves appeared intended to demonstrate the Kremlin's determination to secure its port at Sevastopol, from which Russian naval might is projected to the world.


Kiev retains control over Ukrainian military forces in the western and central areas of the country, and even most Russian-leaning areas in the east have refrained from defying the new government.


But troops in Crimea may not be reliable in the face of the local population's rejection of Kiev's authority. With pro-Russia gunmen at airports and communications centers, it was unclear whether Kiev could bring in forces to challenge any Russian buildup.









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Storm lashes California, but not a drought buster - Washington Post


LOS ANGELES — California was lashed Friday by heavy rains that the parched state so desperately needs, though with the soaking came traffic snarls, power outages and the threat of mudslides.


Even with rainfall totals exceeding six inches in some places by midday, the powerful Pacific storm did not put a major dent in a drought that is among the worst in recent California history.




The first waves of the storm drenched foothill communities east of Los Angeles that just weeks ago were menaced by a wildfire — and now faced the threat of mudslides. Mandatory evacuation orders were issued for about 1,200 homes in the area. Small debris flows covered one street in Glendora, but no property damage occurred, police said.


Forecasters expected the storm to last through Saturday in California before trundling east into similarly rain-starved neighboring states. Phoenix was expecting its first noticeable precipitation in two months.


The threat of mudslides will last at least through Saturday night. Tornadoes and water spouts were possible as the next wave of the storm came ashore Friday.


Rainfall totals in parts of California were impressive, especially in areas that typically don’t receive much, but not nearly enough to offer long-term relief from a long-running drought.


Downtown Los Angeles received two inches before a midday reprieve, but remained about 12 inches below normal rainfall totals for the season.


“We need several large storms and we just don’t see that on the horizon. This is a rogue storm,” National Weather Service meteorologist Eric Boldt said. “We will dry out next week.”


But for this rain, the service said, this would have been the driest December through February on record in Los Angeles.


Rain also fell in the central coast counties, the San Francisco Bay region and the Central Valley. Winter storm warnings were in effect in the Sierra Nevada for heavy snowfall.


Farmer Ray Gene Veldhuis, who grows almonds, walnuts and pistachios and runs a 2,300-cow dairy in the Central Valley’s Merced County, welcomed the wet weather but knew it would not rescue California from drought.


“Hopefully, they keep coming,” Veldhuis said of the storms. “If not, we’ll deal with the hand we’re dealt.”


The storm brought familiar problems.


Numerous traffic accidents occurred on slick or flooded roads across California, including one about 60 miles east of Los Angeles involving a big rig whose driver died after falling from a freeway overpass.


Two men and their dogs were rescued from the swift waters of the Los Angeles River. Hundreds of miles north in San Jose, firefighters also pulled a man from swollen Coyote Creek near a homeless encampment. He was treated for hypothermia.


Power outages hit about 24,000 customers, the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power and Southern California Edison said.


In Glendora and Azusa, cities about 25 miles east of Los Angeles that sit beneath nearly 2,000 acres of steep mountain slopes stripped by fire in January, catch basins filled with a muddy soup of debris — though homes were spared. With the vegetation gone, little held the dirt and rock in place.


Weeks ago, firefighters stopped the flames 15 feet from Dana Waldusky’s back fence.


“This time there’s nothing you can do. You can’t stop water,” said Waldusky.


Meteorologists posted flood watches for many other areas denuded by fires over the past two years.


The storm was good news for other Californians who didn’t have to worry about mudslides.


Kite-surfer Chris Strong braved pelting rain to take advantage of strong winds that gave him about an hour of fun over the pounding surf in the Sunset Beach enclave of Huntington Beach.


“I don’t get to kite here in these conditions very often — only a handful of times — but you put them in the memory bank,” he said.


Surf schools in San Diego cancelled lessons, and asked their customers to be patient.


“It’s unruly out there now but when the storm settles and it cleans up, there will be the best waves in the next few days,” said Rick Gehris of Surfari Surf School.


___


Contributing to this report were Associated Press writers Sue Manning and John Antczak in Los Angeles, Robert Jablon in Glendora, Martha Mendoza in Santa Cruz, Sudhin Thanawala in San Francisco, Scott Smith in Fresno, Gillian Flaccus in Huntington Beach and Julie Watson in San Diego.


Copyright 2014 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.









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Tensions Mounting as Ukraine Accuses Russia of Invading Crimea - Businessweek


Ukraine’s acting president accused Russia of invading his country’s southern Crimea region, where unidentified gunmen seized airports and other facilities, fueling tension as the interim Ukrainian government took office.


Russia has “started a naked aggression against our country,” Oleksandr Turchynov, Ukraine’s acting president, said yesterday in a speech aired by the parliament’s television channel. “I demand that President Putin halt the provocation immediately and call military forces back from Crimea.”


Western leaders urged Russian President Vladimir Putin not to fuel further turmoil in Crimea by intervening, while Russia offered no public information on its actions. German Chancellor Angela Merkel and U.K. Prime Minister David Cameron called Putin yesterday, and U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry spoke with his Russian counterpart for the second time in two days.


In a brief White House appearance, U.S. President Barack Obama said yesterday he’s “deeply concerned” by reports of Russian military movements in Crimea and said any Russian violation of Ukrainian sovereignty would be “deeply destabilizing.” In New York, the United Nations Security Council met for about 90 minutes in an emergency closed-door meeting at Ukraine’s request.


While Obama warned Russia that “there will be costs for any military intervention in Ukraine,” he didn’t specify any potential American actions, underscoring the West’s limited leverage over Putin in the crisis.


G-8 Boycott


“Right now the situation remains very fluid,” the president said, adding that Vice President Joe Biden has spoken with new Ukrainian prime minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk to lend support to the new government.


The U.S. and its allies may find it difficult to attend the Group of Eight meeting in Sochi, Russia, in June if Russia violates its commitments to a sovereign Ukraine, said an Obama administration official who requested anonymity to describe the discussions. Russia’s desire for improved trade and commercial ties also may be put at risk, the official said.


The U.S. State Department late yesterday warned American citizens to defer all non-essential travel to Ukraine, particularly the Crimean peninsula.


“Even though, so far, the events have unfolded peacefully, the situation isn’t guaranteed to remain that way,” Andrew Weiss, vice president for studies at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace in Washington, said in a phone interview.


Financial Sanctions


Russia has alarmed Western leaders with moves in Crimea to thwart any move by Ukraine’s democratic movement to draw the nation toward the European Union and out of Moscow’s orbit. It wasn’t clear, though, what tools the U.S. and its allies have to deter Russia from escalating the situation.


“There could be trade or financial sanctions on Russia,” said Daniel Serwer, senior fellow at the Center for Transatlantic Relations at the Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies in Washington. “The problem is no one wants to go back to a cold war.”


A Russian invasion of Ukraine would risk interrupting deliveries of Russian gas to other European nations and further destabilizing a country that’s already on the brink of default and elected a new government only this week.


U.S. Ambassador to the UN Samantha Power called for urgent international mediation to defuse the situation. Her U.K. counterpart, Mark Lyall Grant, said no Security Council approval or action is needed for such a mission and said UN envoy Robert Serry, who’s already in Ukraine, may be tapped to lead or participate in such an effort.


Russian Sway


Meanwhile, tensions continue to mount in Crimea, home to Russia’s Black Sea fleet, after an uprising in Kiev against ousted President Viktor Yanukovych last week called into question Russia’s sway over the country of 45 million people.


“It appears that the Russian military now controls the Crimean peninsula,” U.S. Representative Mike Rogers of Michigan, chairman of the House intelligence committee, said in an e-mailed statement. Russia’s actions are “yet another indicator that Vladimir Putin’s hegemonic ambitions threaten U.S. interests and allies around the world.”


Thirteen planes carrying about 2,000 paratroopers have landed in the region, Serhiy Kunitsyn, a representative in Crimea of Ukrainian leader Turchynov, said yesterday on the ATR television station.


‘Heavily Weaponed’


In New York, Ukraine’s ambassador to the UN, Yuriy Sergeyev, said Russia illegally flew military transport aircraft and helicopters across Ukraine’s borders. While he didn’t have information on “heavily weaponed people” at Crimea’s two airports and parliament area, he said it’s already clear that Russia has violated Ukraine’s sovereignty.


Putin spokesman Dmitry Peskov declined to comment when reached by mobile phone. Igor Konashenkov, a spokesman at the defense ministry in Moscow, wasn’t immediately available.


Russian Ambassador to the UN Vitaly Churkin said he had no specific information on extra Russian forces having been deployed to Crimea or elsewhere in Ukraine.


“I recall from history books that when World War I started, some newspapers in the United Kingdom reported that they saw Russian cossacks in the railway station. So those reports -- they’re not always true,” Churkin said.


“We have an agreement with Ukraine on the presence of the Russian Black Sea Fleet on the base near Sevastopol, and we are acting within the framework of that agreement,” he said.


Yanukovych Appears


Ethnic Russians comprise 59 percent of Crimea’s population of about 2 million people, with 24 percent Ukrainian and 12 percent Tatar, according to 2001 census data. Of the entire country’s population, 78 percent are Ukrainian and 17 percent are Russian.


At the UN, Churkin said the establishment of the new interim Ukrainian government was “questionable” and said Russia wants to return to an internationally mediated Feb. 21 accord between ousted president Yanukovych and his opponents.


Speaking publicly for the first time since leaving Ukraine, Yanukovych said yesterday that he’s still the nation’s rightful president and urged Russia to refrain from military intervention. Ukraine should abide by a peace accord sealed a week ago with European Union diplomats, under which he’d remain leader through December, Yanukovych said in the city of Rostov-on-Don in southern Russia.


Yanukovych said he’d been betrayed after signing the EU-brokered pact and blamed the West for it not being implemented.


“I’m the real president,” he said.


To contact the reporters on this story: Daryna Krasnolutska in Kiev at dkrasnolutsk@bloomberg.net; Terry Atlas in Washington at tatlas@bloomberg.net


To contact the editors responsible for this story: John Walcott at jwalcott9@bloomberg.net; Mark Sweetman at msweetman@bloomberg.net; Balazs Penz at bpenz@bloomberg.net









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Ukraine calls Russian troops an 'invasion' - Washington Post


SIMFEROPOL, Ukraine — Several hundred troops in green camouflage, without insignia and carrying military-style automatic rifles, entered and secured areas of the civilian airport in Crimea’s regional capital of Simferopol early Friday and deployed elsewhere, drawing protests from the new Ukrainian government against what it called a Russian invasion.


Video taken at the scene showed the troops patrolling inside the airport and standing guard outside. Flights continued to operate; no shots were fired.




In an unscheduled appearance at the White House on Friday afternoon, President Obama said the United States is "deeply concerned" by reports of military movements by the Russian federation inside Ukraine, and warned that "there will be costs for any military intervention." He added: "Any violation of Ukraine's sovereignty... would be deeply destabilizing.”


In Kiev, Ukraine’s new interior minister, Arsen Avakov, said the armed men were Russian troops.


The Ukrainian parliament demanded Friday that Russia halt what lawmakers described as violations of Ukraine’s sovereignty and territorial integrity. The legislature called for a U.N. Security Countil meeting on the crisis.


“What is happening can be called an armed invasion and occupation. In violation of all international treaties and norms. This is a direct provocation for armed bloodshed in the territory of a sovereign state,” Avakov said.


Avakov said troops from the Russian navy’s Black Sea Fleet, berthed principally at the Crimean port of Sevastopol, had also secured entrances to the Belbek military airport near the city.


“There is still no direct armed conflict. Diplomats should speak,” Avakov said.


[READ: To understand Crimea, look back at its complicated history]


A spokesman for the Black Sea Fleet denied the reports that its troops are involved in blocking the Belbek airfield, according to the Interfax news agency.


“No subdivision of the Black Sea Fleet has been advanced into the Belbek area, let alone involved in blocking it,” the spokesman said. “Given the unstable situation around the Black Sea Fleet bases in the Crimea, and the places where our service members live with their families, security has been stepped by the Black Sea Fleet’s anti-terror units.”


A Crimea news Web site, Argumenty Nedeli Krym, reported that the armed men carried assault rifles. “As journalists attempted to approach them, one of the servicemen warned that they would shoot to kill,” the Web site said.


At the Belbek airport, armed men and a military transport truck blocked the entrance. Whoever the men were, they did not appear to be civilian militiamen, but trained soldiers.


When a man who appeared to be a Russian officer with two bodyguards approached them, they spread out in defensive positions, squatted and waited for orders.


Dozens of troop transport trucks were scattered along the highway between Sevastopol and Simferopol.


Seven Russian armored personnel carriers were spotted on the roadside outside Sevastopol showing Russian colors. One of the gunners said they were Russian Federation forces from a base in Russia’s Krasnodar region about 180 miles from Sochi.


The mysterious troops at the main airport in Simferopol slowly circulated at the arrival and departure concourses as international flights from Moscow and Istanbul continued as scheduled.


The soldiers refused to answer questions from reporters about who they are and what their mission is.


A dozen pro-Russian civilian self defense militiamen stood by, but not with, the soldiers.


In the Balaklava district near Sevastopol, at least 20 men wearing the uniform of Russia’s Black Sea Fleet and carrying automatic rifles surrounded a Ukrainian border guard post Friday, initiating a tense standoff with Ukrainian border police inside, Reuters news agency reported.


A man who identified himself as an officer of the Black Sea Fleet told the agency: “We are here . . . so as not to have a repeat of the Maidan.” He referred to the popular uprising at Kiev’s Independence Square that led to the ouster of pro-Russian president Viktor Yanukovych last weekend.


In the southern Russian city of Rostov-on-Don, Yanukovych said he would not ask Moscow to intervene militarily in Ukraine, but he stressed that Russia “cannot stand aside” and “cannot be indifferent to the destiny” of his country. He said he “intends to keep fighting for Ukraine’s future” and denounced the new authorities in Kiev as “pro-fascist thugs.”


In Moscow, Russian President Vladimir Putin broke his week-long silence on Ukraine with a mixed message. He ordered Russian officials to consult with other nations as well as the International Monetary Fund on means of financial assistance for Ukraine. He also said that efforts to maintain and promote trade between Russia and Ukraine should continue.


At the same time, Putin said Moscow would consider the possibility of sending humanitarian supplies to Crimea.


A Ukrainian legislator from Yanukovych’s political party said Friday that the region, officially called the Autonomous Republic of Crimea, is not trying to secede from Ukraine.


Nestor Shufrych of the Party of Regions said the speaker of the Crimean regional parliament, Volodymyr Konstantynov, had told him by telephone that Crimea was interested only in broadening the terms of its current autonomous status.


“They are not asking for anything more,” Shufrych said. “The autonomous republic’s possible secession from our country is completely out of the question.”


The Ukrainian defense minister, Adm. Ihor Tenyukh, said he planned to go to Crimea later on Friday. The country’s foreign minister has requested talks with his Russian counterpart concerning Crimea.


“We have not received a reply from the Russian side so far,” said the acting foreign minister, Andriy Deshchytsa. “We are open to negotiations and wish an exclusively peaceful resolution of this problem.”


The revolutionary upheaval in Ukraine’s faraway capital has awakened the separatist dreams of ethnic Russians living on the Crimean Peninsula, where on Thursday pro-Russia gunmen who occupied the regional parliament building were met with an outpouring of support.


A group of men dressed in camouflage and armed with rocket-­propelled grenades entered the building early Thursday in the capital of Ukraine’s Crimea region, according to local reporters, then barricaded themselves inside and raised the Russian flag on the roof — a succinct answer to warnings from the United States and Europe that Ukraine must remain united and Russia must stand back.


In the freezing weather outside the parliament, separatist fever was running hot, as newly formed self-defense militias paraded under Russian military colors. They shouted thanks to their Soviet grandfathers who had fought against the Germans in World War II in the siege of nearby Sevastopol, a brutal 250-day campaign that left tens of thousands dead and the city in rubble.


“We want Crimea to return to Russia, pure and simple,” said Igor, a leader of a militia group composed of men who had fought in Afghanistan for the Soviet Union. Like other citizen militiamen, he declined to give his last name.


The demonstrations in Simferopol unnerved the newly appointed government more than 400 miles away in the capital, Kiev.


“Measures have been taken to counter extremist actions and not allow the situation to escalate into an armed confrontation” in the center of Simferopol, said Avakov, the interim interior minister.


By early morning, police had surrounded the Crimean parliament, but they did nothing to oust the men who had stormed inside. The occupation began to seem like a bit of a show; it was possible the gunmen had already departed. Police officers out front showed no fear of anyone inside and, instead, turned their backs to the building, taking frequent breaks to smoke cigarettes and drink tea.


Meanwhile, thousands of ethnic Russians — who make up about half of Crimea’s population — arrived to demonstrate. They issued a warning to recalcitrant lawmakers here to give in to the crowd’s No. 1 demand: a referendum on, at minimum, whether to allow the Crimean Peninsula — an autonomous state — to become an even more independent region, with its own leadership, which many demonstrators hoped would enshrine Russian language and culture.


Others who came to the parliament clearly wanted much more, calling for Crimea to return to the arms of the Russian motherland. “The criminals had their revolution in Kiev, and now we are having ours in Crimea,” said Alexandr, a member of another self-defense brigade. “We’re Russian, and we belong to Russia.”


For all their fervor, the crowds have not been huge, and it is hard to judge how much support the cause of separatism or a more independent region might have across Crimea. The government that was approved in Kiev on Thursday is stepping gingerly to avoid arousing passions. Pravy Sektor, the right-wing nationalist group, has said it will not send its members to the peninsula, to avoid confrontations.


Moscow has expressed displeasure with the upheavals in Ukraine, questioned the legitimacy of the new government and stressed that the West should keep out of the country’s internal affairs. But although Russian President Vladi­mir Putin on Wednesday ordered a large-scale military exercise in regions bordering other parts of Ukraine, triggering concern about a possible intervention, Russia has not signaled any desire to bring Crimea back into its fold.


Even so, members of separatist militias in Crimea, organized under a political party called the Russian Bloc, have begun to flex their muscles. They threw up checkpoints Thursday along the main highway between Sevastopol and Simferopol, operated by men in mismatched camouflage who stood before a hand-painted sign warning: “Those who approach with a sword will die by the sword.”


Until now, it could be illegal, and sometimes dangerous, to advocate separatism in Ukraine. Now it is all the rage, with groups here demanding that Russia reclaim territory that Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev gifted to the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic in 1954. The Russian Black Sea naval fleet is berthed primarily in Sevastopol and supports 15,000 sailors and support staff.


Outside the parliament, voices in the crowd shouted, “Take us back!” as demonstrators unfurled a large Russian flag, sang patriotic Russian songs and denounced as “hooligans” the forces behind Yanukovych’s ouster.


Yanukovych, on the run for several days, appeared Thursday in Moscow, where he was apparently granted Russia’s protection.


Asked what he thought would happen next, a Russian Bloc politician from Sevastopol, Gennadiy Basov, said, “I have no idea.”


Basov said the pro-Russia militias in the Crimea “are prepared to defend our homes and families” from any forces sent by the central government in Kiev.


“Everything coming out of Kiev is illegal,” Basov said.


He and others outside the parliament, stoked on inflammatory Russian TV news shows that repeatedly broadcast images of protesters in Kiev hurling gasoline bombs and advancing with clubs, warned that if they let their guard down, hordes of “fascists” would descend on Crimea.


“They would come to steal, rape and kill,” one man said.


A woman who declined to give her name but described herself as “a Russian housewife from ­Simferopol” boasted that the demonstrators here were peaceful and unafraid to show their faces — ignoring for a moment that the protesters had gathered to support unknown gunmen inside the parliament.


In Kiev, Oleksandr Turchynov, Ukraine’s interim president, warned Moscow that any movement of military personnel off Russia’s naval base in Sevastopol “will be viewed as military aggression.”


Speaking in the Ukrainian parliament in Kiev on Thursday, Turchynov said, “Ukrainian enemies should not try to destabilize the situation, should not encroach on our independence, sovereignty and territory.”









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Ousted Ukraine president says he's surprised by Putin's silence - Washington Post


SIMFEROPOL, Ukraine — Several hundred armed men in green camouflage, without insignia and carrying military-style automatic rifles, entered and secured areas of the civilian airport in Crimea’s regional capital of Simferopol early Friday.


Video taken at the scene showed the men patrolling inside the airport and standing guard outside. Flights continued to operate; no shots were fired.




In Kiev, Ukraine’s new interior minister, Arsen Avakov, said the armed men were Russian troops.


“What is happening can be called an armed invasion and occupation. In violation of all international treaties and norms. This is a direct provocation for armed bloodshed in the territory of a sovereign state,” Avakov said.


Avakov said troops from the Russian navy’s Black Sea Fleet, berthed principally at the Crimean port of Sevastopol, had also secured entrances to the Belbek military airport near the city.


“There is still no direct armed conflict. Diplomats should speak,” Avakov said.


A spokesman for the Black Sea Fleet denied the reports that its troops are involved in blocking the Belbek airfield, according to the Interfax news agency.


“No subdivision of the Black Sea Fleet has been advanced into the Belbek area, let alone involved in blocking it,” the spokesman said. “Given the unstable situation around the Black Sea Fleet bases in the Crimea, and the places where our service members live with their families, security has been stepped by the Black Sea Fleet’s anti-terror units.”


A Crimea news Web site, Argumenty Nedeli Krym, reported that the armed men carried M-4 assault rifles. “As journalists attempted to approach them, one of the servicemen warned that they would shoot to kill,” the Web site said.


At the Belbek airport, armed men and a military transport truck blocked the entrance. Whoever the men were, they did not appear to be civilian militiamen, but trained soldiers.


When a man who appeared to be a Russian officer with two bodyguards approached them, they spread out in defensive positions, squatted and waited for orders.


Dozens of troop transport trucks were scattered along the highway between Sevastopol and Simferopol.


The mysterious troops at the main airport in Simferopol slowly circulated at the arrival and departure concourses as international flights from Moscow and Istanbul continued as scheduled.


The soldiers refused to answer questions from reporters about who they are and what their mission is.


A dozen pro-Russian civilian self defense militiamen stood by, but not with, the soldiers.


In the Balaklava district near Sevastopol, at least 20 men wearing the uniform of Russia’s Black Sea Fleet and carrying automatic rifles surrounded a Ukrainian border guard post Friday, initiating a tense standoff with Ukrainian border police inside, Reuters news agency reported.


A man who identified himself as an officer of the Black Sea Fleet told the agency: “We are here . . . so as not to have a repeat of the Maidan.” He referred to the popular uprising at Kiev’s Independence Square that led to the ouster of pro-Russian president Viktor Yanukovych last weekend.


In the southern Russian city of Rostov-on-Don, Yanukovych said he would not ask Moscow to intervene militarily in Ukraine, but he stressed that Russia “cannot stand aside” and “cannot be indifferent to the destiny” of his country.


In Moscow, Russian President Vladimir Putin broke his week-long silence on Ukraine with a mixed message. He ordered Russian officials to consult with other nations as well as the International Monetary Fund on means of financial assistance for Ukraine. He also said that efforts to maintain and promote trade between Russia and Ukraine should continue.


At the same time, Putin said Moscow would consider the possibility of sending humanitarian supplies to Crimea.


A Ukrainian legislator from Yanukovych’s political party said Friday that the region, officially called the Autonomous Republic of Crimea, is not trying to secede from Ukraine.


Nestor Shufrych of the Party of Regions said the speaker of the Crimean regional parliament, Volodymyr Konstantynov, had told him by telephone that Crimea was interested only in broadening the terms of its current autonomous status.


“They are not asking for anything more,” Shufrych said. “The autonomous republic’s possible secession from our country is completely out of the question.”


The Ukrainian defense minister, Adm. Ihor Tenyukh, said he planned to go to Crimea later on Friday. The country’s foreign minister has requested talks with his Russian counterpart concerning Crimea.


“We have not received a reply from the Russian side so far,” said the acting foreign minister, Andriy Deshchytsa. “We are open to negotiations and wish an exclusively peaceful resolution of this problem.”


The revolutionary upheaval in Ukraine’s faraway capital has awakened the separatist dreams of ethnic Russians living on the Crimean Peninsula, where on Thursday pro-Russia gunmen who occupied the regional parliament building were met with an outpouring of support.


A group of men dressed in camouflage and armed with rocket-­propelled grenades entered the building early Thursday in the capital of Ukraine’s Crimea region, according to local reporters, then barricaded themselves inside and raised the Russian flag on the roof — a succinct answer to warnings from the United States and Europe that Ukraine must remain united and Russia must stand back.


In the freezing weather outside the parliament, separatist fever was running hot, as newly formed self-defense militias paraded under Russian military colors. They shouted thanks to their Soviet grandfathers who had fought against the Germans in World War II in the siege of nearby Sevastopol, a brutal 250-day campaign that left tens of thousands dead and the city in rubble.


“We want Crimea to return to Russia, pure and simple,” said Igor, a leader of a militia group composed of men who had fought in Afghanistan for the Soviet Union. Like other citizen militiamen, he declined to give his last name.


The demonstrations in Simferopol unnerved the newly appointed government more than 400 miles away in the capital, Kiev.


“Measures have been taken to counter extremist actions and not allow the situation to escalate into an armed confrontation” in the center of Simferopol, said Avakov, the interim interior minister.


By early morning, police had surrounded the Crimean parliament, but they did nothing to oust the men who had stormed inside. The occupation began to seem like a bit of a show; it was possible the gunmen had already departed. Police officers out front showed no fear of anyone inside and, instead, turned their backs to the building, taking frequent breaks to smoke cigarettes and drink tea.


Meanwhile, thousands of ethnic Russians — who make up about half of Crimea’s population — arrived to demonstrate. They issued a warning to recalcitrant lawmakers here to give in to the crowd’s No. 1 demand: a referendum on, at minimum, whether to allow the Crimean Peninsula — an autonomous state — to become an even more independent region, with its own leadership, which many demonstrators hoped would enshrine Russian language and culture.


Others who came to the parliament clearly wanted much more, calling for Crimea to return to the arms of the Russian motherland. “The criminals had their revolution in Kiev, and now we are having ours in Crimea,” said Alexandr, a member of another self-defense brigade. “We’re Russian, and we belong to Russia.”


For all their fervor, the crowds have not been huge, and it is hard to judge how much support the cause of separatism or a more independent region might have across Crimea. The government that was approved in Kiev on Thursday is stepping gingerly to avoid arousing passions. Pravy Sektor, the right-wing nationalist group, has said it will not send its members to the peninsula, to avoid confrontations.


Moscow has expressed displeasure with the upheavals in Ukraine, questioned the legitimacy of the new government and stressed that the West should keep out of the country’s internal affairs. But although Russian President Vladi­mir Putin on Wednesday ordered a large-scale military exercise in regions bordering other parts of Ukraine, triggering concern about a possible intervention, Russia has not signaled any desire to bring Crimea back into its fold.


Even so, members of separatist militias in Crimea, organized under a political party called the Russian Bloc, have begun to flex their muscles. They threw up checkpoints Thursday along the main highway between Sevastopol and Simferopol, operated by men in mismatched camouflage who stood before a hand-painted sign warning: “Those who approach with a sword will die by the sword.”


Until now, it could be illegal, and sometimes dangerous, to advocate separatism in Ukraine. Now it is all the rage, with groups here demanding that Russia reclaim territory that Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev gifted to the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic in 1954. The Russian Black Sea naval fleet is berthed primarily in Sevastopol and supports 15,000 sailors and support staff.


Outside the parliament, voices in the crowd shouted, “Take us back!” as demonstrators unfurled a large Russian flag, sang patriotic Russian songs and denounced as “hooligans” the forces behind Yanukovych’s ouster.


Yanukovych, on the run for several days, appeared Thursday in Moscow, where he was apparently granted Russia’s protection.


Asked what he thought would happen next, a Russian Bloc politician from Sevastopol, Gennadiy Basov, said, “I have no idea.”


Basov said the pro-Russia militias in the Crimea “are prepared to defend our homes and families” from any forces sent by the central government in Kiev.


“Everything coming out of Kiev is illegal,” Basov said.


He and others outside the parliament, stoked on inflammatory Russian TV news shows that repeatedly broadcast images of protesters in Kiev hurling gasoline bombs and advancing with clubs, warned that if they let their guard down, hordes of “fascists” would descend on Crimea.


“They would come to steal, rape and kill,” one man said.


A woman who declined to give her name but described herself as “a Russian housewife from ­Simferopol” boasted that the demonstrators here were peaceful and unafraid to show their faces — ignoring for a moment that the protesters had gathered to support unknown gunmen inside the parliament.


In Kiev, Oleksandr Turchynov, Ukraine’s interim president, warned Moscow that any movement of military personnel off Russia’s naval base in Sevastopol “will be viewed as military aggression.”


Speaking in the Ukrainian parliament in Kiev on Thursday, Turchynov said, “Ukrainian enemies should not try to destabilize the situation, should not encroach on our independence, sovereignty and territory.”


Will Englund in Kiev contributed to this report.









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