Off the wire
Xinhua Insight: Xi's Yunnan visit highlights poverty elimination, ethnic solidarity  • Roundup: 100 days to go for Expo Milano 2015  • Kenya urged to reform horticulture sector to boost competitiveness  • Botswana's trade minister to visit Norway for beef export  • Victims' families of Shanghai stampede to be compensated  • French stock market index up 0.87 pct on Wednesday  • (Sports) Pakistan cricket team captain may miss world cup due to injury  • 2nd LD: China offers Switzerland 8-bln-USD QFII quota  • 1st LD: China offers Switzerland 8-bln-USD QFII quota  • Interview: Grenada expects to deepen cooperation with China: PM  
You are here:   Home

Kiev accuses Russia of sending troops, arms to east Ukraine, Moscow denies

Xinhua, January 22, 2015 Adjust font size:

Ukrainian authorities on Wednesday accused Russia of sending troops and armament into eastern Ukraine to support independence-seeking insurgents.

"Due to the losses incurred in military hardware and manpower, the Russian side has carried out a build-up of its occupation contingent," Andriy Lysenko, spokesman for the government's military operation in the east, told reporters during a media briefing.

Lysenko said that in recent days, "significant number" of Russian troops, at least 60 tanks, 50 armored vehicles and 100 multipurpose all-terrain infantry vehicles "Tigr" crossed into eastern Ukraine from Russia.

The spokesman, however, provided no specific evidence of Russian troops or military hardware presence in Ukraine.

Earlier in the day, Foreign Ministry spokesman Eugene Perebiynis told reporters that Kiev has asked Moscow for an explanation of what he called "concentration of about 50,000 combat-ready Russian troops along the joint border."

Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov has denied the allegations, saying nobody can present the proof of such presence.

Kiev and some Western countries have long accused Russia of direct involvement in the conflict in Ukraine, which Moscow has denied flatly. Enditem