Ukrainian Defense Ministry on Saturday denied that the suspected saboteurs who
plotted bomb attacks in Crimea are their emplyees, according to a
statement.
"The ministry reports that there
has never been the 37th battalion in the 56th brigade of the Defense
Intelligence. The reported detained people are not employees of the
Defense Intelligence of the Ukrainian Defense Ministry," according to the statement.
The
denial came as a response to the information given on Friday by a
Russian intelligence source, who according to RIA Novosti news agency
named Vladimir Serdyuk as organizer of the planned acts of sabotage in Crimea
.
The
source claimed Serdyuk was the chief of intelligence of the 37th
battalion, 56th brigade of the Ukrainian Defense Ministry's Main
Intelligence Directorate.
Russian media also reported Friday on suspected saboteurs admitting that they had plotted bomb attacks in Crimea.
Ridvan
Sulemanov, who was held by the Russian Federal Security Bureau (FSB) in
Crimea, admitted that he acted upon the assignment given by the
Ukrainian military intelligence service, the Interfax news agency said,
citing a video footage obtained from the FSB.
According
to Sulemanov, he was tasked with travelling to Simferopol to find a
place at the central coach station and the airport to plant improvised
explosive devices.
A
still image, taken from video footage and released by Russia's Federal
Security Service (FSB) on August 11, 2016, shows an FSB officer
escorting a detained man, who is suspected of planning to carry out
attacks inside Crimea, according to the FSB, at an unknown location in
Crimea. (Russia's Federal Security Service/Handout via Reuters)
Sulemanov said he was also asked to check the number of CCTV cameras in the area and the frequency of law enforcement patrols.
Zakhtei,
another suspect who was said to be a driver and whose full name is not
given, confessed in the interrogation video that he worked for the
Ukrainian intelligence service and was recruited by suspected Ukrainian
saboteurs.
"Some
stranger called me ... He told me that I was supposed to come to the
village of Risovo not far from Armyansk at about midnight to collect a
group of people with some load. I was told not to tell anyone about this
ride," the Interfax quoted Zakhtei as saying.
The
Interfax also quoted an unnamed source with Russian special services
saying that one person had been arrested and several more detained, and
that they had started providing testimony confirming Kiev's involvement
in the terror scheme.
Ukraine has yet responded to the video footage. It was not clear when the arrests were made.
Tensions
between Russia and Ukraine have been escalating as Russian President
Vladimir Putin on Wednesday accused Kiev of plotting terrorist attacks
in Crimea after Moscow said it thwarted a series of terrorist attacks in Crimea planned by the Ukraine military intelligence service.
Putin also vowed to take additional measures to ensure the safety of infrastructure and citizens there.Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko, however, denied the accusations, calling them "preposterous and cynical."
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