Berkut riot police weren’t involved in mass killings by unidentified snipers in Kiev on February 20. The detention of its officers is an attempt to tarnish Ukrainian law enforcement, Berkut veteran organization head, Vladimir Krashevsky, told RT.
12 Berkut officers were detained for being part of the so-called
‘black company,’ which were given sniper rifles to provide cover
for their retreating comrades, Oleg Makhnitsky, Ukraine’s acting
Prosecutor General said on Thursday.
Krashevsky has refuted claims that Berkut used fire arms against
the demonstrators on the bloodiest day of the Ukrainian coup,
which saw President Viktor Yanukovich ousted and 42 people dead.
“At around 8:00 AM local time [on February 20], the
withdrawal of the interior troops and Berkut forces began in
several directions. At that moment the troops – who were unarmed
– came under sniper fire from several buildings,” Krashevsky
told RT.
According to the veteran, Berkut’s covering troops had to perform
the risky operation of evacuating 300 interior ministry
servicemen from Kiev’s Oktyabrsky palace.
“250 people were evacuated thanks to cover from the guys in
black uniforms with yellow armbands (Berkut),” he said.
“50 people, unfortunately, were captured by the demonstrators
and taken to Maidan.”
“During the cover operation one of the Berkut troops, Nikolay
Semchuk, was killed by two snipers. Snipers call this a ‘double
shooting’, when two shots are fired at the same. One shot landed
in the leg and the other – in the head,” Krashevsky added.
He also corrected the acting Prosecutor General, saying that the
official name of the unit isn’t “Berkut black company”
but “Special Company of the Special Police Regiment Berkut in
the City of Kiev.”
“Its staff include 90 people, with 23 of them being present in
the area where gunfire came,” he said.
The Berkut veteran has confirmed that “12 people were
detained yesterday [April 2]” and “three of them
currently remain in custody.”
“They are officers – the commander of the company and two others.
As yet, I’m unaware of the charges laid against them. But so far
I’ve learned that they’ll have to take a polygraph lie detector
test,” he said.
Krashevsky believes that the politically-loaded investigation on
the Kiev snipers, and the arrest of the Berkut officers are part
of a campaign “to turn them and the rest of the law
enforcement agencies into the enemy."
"There was an info war, a massive one, from the Western and
Ukrainian media,” he stressed.
According to the veteran, the Ukrainians were only shown images
where “weaponless people were falling down after being shot
at – allegedly by the interior ministry servicemen. But it was
just a montage, which was put together and accompanied by a
relevant commentary. It was nothing more. But that was enough for
our people.”
The identity of the ‘Maidan snipers’ is a hot political topic in
Ukraine and abroad, with both protesters and police among those
killed by sniper fire in the center of the Ukrainian capital.
The prime minister in the Ukrainian coup-imposed government,
Arseny Yatsenyuk, says that ousted president Yanukovich should
answer for the killing of the Maidan protesters.
He told the BBC that a criminal investigation had been launched
against Yanukovich, accusing him of mass murder.
The Ukrainian president, who fled to Russia following the
February-20 events, has said many times that he did not order the
police to shoot at the demonstrators.
Yatsenyuk now wants him to defend himself in a Ukrainian court,
adding that there’s compelling evidence that “senior
Ukrainian officials were responsible for the massacre of
people” in Kiev.
A leaked phone call between EU foreign affairs chief, Catherine
Ashton, and Estonian Foreign Minister Urmas Paet talked about the
strong suspicion that people among Ukraine’s new leadership were
behind the snipers.
Earlier, Aleksandr Yakimenko, who headed the Ukrainian Security
Service during the Kiev standoff, said the so-called Maidan
Self-Defense Force controlled the building from which the snipers
were shooting.