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Saturday, March 8, 2014
Greek police arrest Roma couple over abduction of minor
Threats from Moscow, ignored by Kiev: what next for the Ukrainian soldiers in Crimea?
Crimea's vote to join Russia leaves thousands of military personnel stranded in a no-man's-land, forgotten by their government and fearful that they might soon belong to another country, whose own troops urge them to defect
The two Ural trucks, full of troops, arrived under cover of darkness and a pea-souper fog at the Ukrainian missile defence base outside Sevastopol late on Friday night, and rammed their way through the gates. Once inside, the Russian troops fanned out and screamed that they would shoot to kill if the Ukrainians did not surrender.
After some brief tussles the situation was calmed and the Russians eventually left, their trucks racing out of the base.
Outside, members of a local "self-defence" volunteer unit harassed journalists, and the deputy commander of the base briefly appeared to give comments. "We ignored their orders and eventually they left," he said, as one of the masked volunteers shone a light in his face and tried to stop him speaking. "I guess they will be back soon."
There are several thousand Ukrainian military personnel on more than a dozen bases across the Crimea, creating what could be the most explosive problem facing the Russians in their operation to annex the peninsula.
Uncertain of their status since the Crimean parliament announced that it wants the territory to join with Russia, the soldiers feel threatened by Moscow and abandoned by Kiev. Having sworn an oath to Ukraine, they could now, within a week, find themselves in one country and their homes and families in another.
Last Thursday, Crimea's parliament voted to join Russia, and said a referendum would take place on 16 March to "confirm" the decision. Rustam Temirgaliev, deputy prime minister of Crimea's de facto authorities, said on Thursday that, as of that day, the only legal troops on Crimean soil were Russian troops, and "any troops of a third country will be treated as illegal band formations, with all the consequences that entails".
For those inside the bases, the psychological effects are hard to take. At Bakhchisarai, where last week Russian soldiers surrounded the base, there is now an uneasy calm. The Russians, who told the Ukrainians they should defect either to serve "the people of Crimea" or better still the Russian army, have now left. Last Tuesday at 10pm, the Russian soldiers drove off from the base, and have not been back. The men inside have been watching the news, talking to friends in other bases and waiting to see if the Russians come back and attempt to storm the base.
Yesterday music was blaring out in the courtyard as a tattered Ukrainian flag fluttered in the breeze. A small number of the men were allowed out of the base to spend some time with their families, given that it was International Women's Day.
"It's written in all the textbooks that during a time of military action, the first three or four days are the hardest, and after that you adapt," said Vladimir Dokuchayev, deputy commander of the base. "That is more or less what has happened. We are getting used to the situation."
At the beginning, he said, some of the rank and file left the base, begged to do so by friends and family. In the past few days, however, nobody had left.
There is frustration at the bases at Kiev's failure to take more decisive action. A Ukrainian military source in Sevastopol said: "There's a feeling that in Kiev they are paralysed: they don't want to believe that this is happening, and they just don't know what to do. They are hoping they will wake up and find this will all have gone away – that there will be a miracle. They are not doing anything."
He added: "Can you imagine if there was just one American soldier stranded somewhere and being assaulted by enemies? The US government would mount a massive campaign to save him. We have thousands of soldiers stranded and they have been abandoned by our government, completely abandoned."
Although the upper house of Russia's parliament has given President Vladimir Putin the green light to use troops in Ukraine, Putin and other top Russian officials insist that this prerogative has not yet been used, and say any troops on the ground belong to self-declared Crimean defence units. However, international observers have been barred from entering the territory, and an overwhelming amount of evidence on the ground suggests that the formations of armed men wearing no insignia are indeed Russian troops.
At numerous Ukrainian bases across Crimea, commanders report that the well-organised troops that have surrounded them are Russian. The troops themselves have admitted as much in private conversations, and high-ranking officers from the Russian army have been inside the bases, telling Ukrainians that they are there on the orders of Putin himself.
The usual scenario, played out at bases across Crimea, is that Russian troops without insignia surround a base before two high-ranking officers drive up in a car, often a Volkswagen Passat. The officers will then speak with the ranking officers inside the base and set out a list of demands, including that weapons be surrendered and the troops defect. The head of the Ukrainian navy defected recently, but Ukrainian officials insist that apart from him there have been no officer defections.
While few high-ranking military personnel from Kiev have paid visits to the peninsula, the Observer has heard unconfirmed reports that one such visit ended in a kidnapping.
According to local sources in Sevastopol, three Ukrainian officers, including General Nikolai Zentsev, believed to be a high-ranking Ukrainian counterintelligence officer based in Kiev, were seized on 2 March by irregulars at one of the informal border checkpoints that has sprung up between Crimea and the rest of Ukraine.
"We managed to contact the riot police there, and they told us they had transferred the three of them to 'allies'," said an acquaintance of Zentsev's. "Since then, we have heard not a word at all from them. Through unofficial channels we heard that they are in an FSB prison in Sevastopol and could be transferred to Russia soon."
Neither the Russian nor Ukrainian military has made any comment on the case, and a spokesperson for the Ukrainian ministry of defence did not respond to a request for comment.
During the sieges of bases, the Russian troops have so far behaved with discipline and have been reluctant to fire shots, even when they have threatened to do so and their ultimatums have been ignored. But what happens if the irregular self-defence units begin to take action against the bases is another matter.
Outside the base at Sevastopol, a group of about a dozen hooded irregulars arrived shortly after the Russians and began harassing journalists waiting outside. At least two journalists – a Russian photographer and a Ukrainian cameraman – were assaulted.
Later, when a group of one Greek and four Ukrainian journalists left the scene by car to take the injured cameraman for medical treatment, they were again assaulted.
"We were in the car going to the hospital when we could see that a jeep was following us," said Kostas Onisenko from the Greek newspaper Kathimerini. "A group of people wearing masks got out of the car: two of them had guns, and they started beating us."
The men took telephones, wallets and documents from the group and left them bruised and bloodied. "They could have killed us, but they obviously did not want to," said Onisenko. "It was meant as a scare tactic. It was very clear that they were not randoms; they were well organised and carrying out some kind of order."
For the people inside the bases, the threat that Russian troops could come back with orders to shoot, or that the self-defence units could mount an attack, is very real. And many are even more worried about what will happen after the confrontation is over.
Deputy commander Dokuchayev said that around 70% of the men on his base are local people from Crimea. They all have families and homes in the region, to which they hope to return, and have been placed in an unenviable situation.
"They have taken an oath and they want to remain loyal to their oath, but of course it's hard, of course they are wondering what will happen next and what sort of country they will be living in," he said. "It would be nice if there was some more decisive news or orders from Kiev. We are waiting for orders, but we are not receiving any."
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Sigma Alpha Epsilon — one of the largest fraternities in the United States — has banned pledging and initiation rituals for its chapters nationwide, Bloomberg News reports.
SAE has recently gained an unwelcome reputation as the "deadliest fraternity" in the country. There have been at least 10 deaths since 2006 linked to SAE events, according to Bloomberg — the most of any Greek organization.
These changes imposed by the fraternity's national organization hopes to change that. As Bloomberg reports:
Under the new plan, SAE chapters will still recruit new members and extend them a "bid," or invitation to join. Students accepting the bid will become full members almost immediately. All SAE members will be required to complete additional training, including alcohol education, during their college years.
The fraternity's national organization announced the changes in a statement on their website, as well as in a series of Q & A's. You can read both in full here >>
One of the most telling responses came to a potential question about chapters that don't want to change. In response, SAE wrote, "If we find that the chapter is treating its newest members as second-class citizens, the chapter will be closed."
SAE also had an interesting answer as to their motivations for making what amounts to fairly drastic changes to the national organization. Posing the question "Are you making this change as a result of bad publicity?" they write:
The bad publicity Sigma Alpha Epsilon has received is challenging and regretful because we know that some of our groups have great new-member (pledge) programs and do the right thing. At the same time, we have experienced a number of incidents and deaths, events with consequences that have never been consistent with our membership experience. Furthermore, we have endured a painful number of chapter closings as a result of hazing. Research shows that hazing, which hides in the dark, causes members to lie. At the recent Eminent Archon Institute, our chapter leaders voiced their chief complaint: damage to our national reputation is making it difficult for them to operate.
But the attack on our image is not the sole motivating factor behind the changes. The Supreme Council believes the time is now to embrace change in the way our groups operate in order to ensure our future success. And now is the time to lead the way among Greek-letter organizations. As a result, we may very well turn bad publicity into a positive, proactive image. We are making this change because it's the right thing to do and because we firmly believe in returning to what our Founding Fathers envisioned.
Read the full statement and Q & A at Sigma Alpha Epsilon »
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