KIEV, Ukraine (AP) — The Ukrainian
government on Saturday ramped up its accusations against protesters,
raising fears among the opposition that police are laying the groundwork
for a full-scale assault on the demonstrations that have gripped
Ukraine's capital for two months.
The head of
police accused protesters of torturing two police officers it later
released and blamed radical calls for attacks on officers for the death
of a policeman whose body was found during the
night. He also accused
protesters of stockpiling weapons. A protest leader denied the claim of
kidnapping, calling it a provocation aimed at justifying a crackdown.
Demonstrations
that started in late November to protest President Viktor Yanukovych's
decision to shelve an agreement to deepen ties with the European Union
had been mostly peaceful until a week ago, when radical factions enraged
by new laws to crack down on protests started violent clashes with
police.
Three protesters have
died in the clashes, two of them from gunshot wounds and a third of
unspecified injuries. The Interior Ministry said a policeman was found
shot in the head overnight. No arrests have been made or suspects named.
Protesters
have rained stones and firebombs on police while officers retaliate
with stun grenades and tear gas. On Saturday afternoon, the clash site
was tense and black smoke billowed from a barricade of burning tires.
Demonstrators milled about, many of them bearing clubs, metal rods and
large sticks, but there was no violence.
Protesters seized government buildings in scores of other cities in the European-leaning western part of the country.
Yanukovych
was meeting Saturday with three top opposition leaders, who are
demanding his resignation. Yanukovych so far has offered only relatively
small concessions, but the unrest of the past week could indicate the
government is losing control of much of the country.
The
interior minister, one of the government figures despised most by
protesters said two police officers were released with the help of
negotiations by foreign embassies. He said they had been hospitalized,
but did not give details of how they allegedly were abused.
Vitaly
Zakharchenko earlier said the officers were seized by volunteer
security guards at the protest gatherings in Kiev and held in the city
hall, which protesters have occupied since December and turned into a
makeshift dormitory and operations center.
But the commandant of the corps, Mykhailo Blavatsky, told The Associated Press that no police had been seized.
"The
authorities are looking for a pretext to break up the Maidan and
creating all kinds of provocations," he said. "Capturing a policeman
would only give the authorities reason to go on the attack and we don't
need that."
Zakharchenko earlier said a third captured officer had been released and was in serious condition in a hospital.
In
Lviv, where support for Yanukovych is minuscule, regional lawmakers on
Saturday voted to establish a parallel government. Although the move was
largely symbolic, it demonstrated the strong animosity toward the
government in Ukraine's west. Ukrainian politics largely is divided
between the Russian-speaking east, which is the industrial heartland,
and the Ukrainian-speaking west.
On
Saturday, about 100 protesters briefly occupied the headquarters of the
energy ministry in downtown Kiev. Minister Eduard Stavitskiy said the
country's nuclear energy facilities were placed on high alert.
Andriy
Hrytsenko, a well-known opposition figure and former defense minister,
was quoted Saturday by the newspaper Ukrainska Pravda as calling for
protesters who have legal arms to carry them in self-defense.
"Firearms should be used only in response to threats to human life. I'll be the first to do this," he was quoted as saying.
Yanukovych
has called a special parliament session for Tuesday. The session would
consider a government reshuffle, amnesty for many of the arrested
protesters and changing the harsh new laws cracking down on protests, he
said on Friday.
_____
Yuras Karmanau in Kiev and Laura Mills in Lviv contributed to this story
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