Pro-Russian rebels capture bases

Listen to this article:

Pro-Russian rebels capture bases

LUHANSK – Pro-Russian insurgents have captured three government bases in eastern Ukraine, as the president-elect promised new initiatives to help end the mutiny in the country’s industrial heartland.

Petro Poroshenko, speaking in Warsaw after meeting with President Barack Obama and other Western leaders, rejected a call from Ukraine’s interim authorities to introduce martial law in the restive east, saying he would seek to pacify the region with an offer of amnesty and a promise of early regional elections.

Mr Poroshenko’s overture, expected to be detailed in his inaugural address on Saturday, came as the Ukrainian troops suffered a series of embarrassing setbacks on Wednesday.

National Guard forces ran out of ammunition and had to flee their base near the eastern city of Luhansk after hours of battle in which six militants were killed and three Ukrainian servicemen were injured.

The defeat came as rebel forces seized a border guard headquarters on the city’s outskirts after besieging it for two days, then forced guards out of another base in the nearby town of Sverdlovsk on the Russian border.