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Ukraine vows to strike back after rebels kill 23 troops

July 13, 2014 00:00:00


UKRAINE : An Ukrainian serviceman guards as people looks at weapons during an exhibition displaying arms, military equipment and documents seized from the pro-Russian armed groups during an anti-terrorists operation (ATO) in the east of Ukraine Saturday.

DONETSK, July 12 (agencies): Ukraine has vowed to make pro-Russian rebels pay after losing 23 servicemen in clashes across the separatist east, while Russia proposed a UN resolution demanding a ceasefire to Europe's deadliest conflict in decades.

The Ukrainian defence ministry said Friday the death toll included 19 troops killed in a hail of rockets fired from a truck-mounted Grad rocket launcher system-a type of weapon both Kiev and Washington insist could only have been covertly supplied to the rebels by Russia.

The official spokesman of Ukraine's intensifying eastern assault added that 93 servicemen had sustained "wounds and contusions of varying severity".

"The rebels will pay for the life of every one of our servicemen with tens and hundreds of their own," Ukraine's Western-backed President Petro Poroshenko told an emergency security meeting.

"Not a single terrorist will avoid responsibility," he said. "Every single one of them will get their just desserts."

Friday's official toll is the highest since Poroshenko tore up a brief ceasefire with the rebels on July 1 and relaunched an offensive that managed to dislodge the militias from key eastern strongholds they had held since early April.

The military separately spoke of "eliminating" nearly 100 fighters in one of Ukraine's bloodiest days since the start of the crisis last November when anti-government protests spiralled into revolution and a protracted standoff with pro-Russian rebels.

Russia meanwhile has circulated a proposal for a UN Security Council resolution calling for a ceasefire between Kiev and the pro-Moscow insurgents.

Other elements of the measure would give a greater role to the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe, Russia's UN ambassador Vitaly Churkin told reporters Friday.

He added that the Council "should express deep concern about the increasing number of civilian casualties as a result of intensified combat operations."


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