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2 May 2014 Odessa clashes

2 May clashes
Date 2 May 2014
Location Odessa
Odessa Oblast, Ukraine
Causes
  • Opposition and support for the Donbass insurgency
  • Confrontation between supporters and opponents of the post-Maidan Ukrainian government
Methods
  • Running battles
  • Armed assaults
  • Stone and molotov cocktail projectiles
  • Demonstrations
Result
  • Trade Unions House burnt
  • Pro-Russian protest camp burnt down by Ukrainian unity activists
Parties to the civil conflict
  • Ukraine Ukrainian unity demonstrators
  • Kharkiv football fans
  • Right Sector militants
  • Pro-Russian armed militants & activists
  • Odesskaya Druzhina
  • People's Druzhina

Claimed:

Number
  • 1,200 football fans & pro-Unity activists
  • 600 Kharkiv football fans
300 Odesskaya Druzhina
Casualties
Deaths: 6 (killed by gunfire)
Deaths: 42 (32 asphyxiation, 10 autodefenestration)
Total casualties: 48 dead, 247 injured (27 shot, 31 stabbed) and 99 hospitalised
Arrests: 123
External video
Odessa, the shooter at the Deribasivska Street video from YouTube

Clashes between Euromaidan and anti-Maidan demonstrators erupted in the southern Ukrainian port city of Odessa during January 2014, during the lead-up to the late February revolution. Many people in southern and eastern Ukraine opposed the revolution. Odessa, largely Russophone, witnessed continued unrest throughout 2014. The worst incident occurred on 2 May, when six pro-Ukrainian unity attendees and forty-two pro-Russian anti-Maidan protesters were killed and over 200 people were injured during a confrontation with pro-Ukrainian unity protesters at the Trade Unions House in central Odessa.

Up to 2,000 Euromaidan protesters marched on the regional state administration (RSA) building in Odessa on 26 January, but were repelled by pro-government supporters and municipal barricades. Odessa municipal administration fortified the RSA with concrete blocks to prevent further incursions on 28 January. Confrontations between Euromaidan and Anti-Maidan protesters continued over the next month, and on 19 February, about 100 unidentified men wearing masks and helmets, and armed with baseball bats, assaulted a pro-Maidan demonstration. Three journalists and two cameramen were injured in the clashes. A number of Russian nationalist groups (Odesska Druzhyna, Anti-Maidan) were active throughout the period and actively supported by senior Russian politicians such as Sergey Glazyev.

After the ousting of president Viktor Yanukovych by Euromaidan protesters in late February, heightened tensions between Euromaidan and anti-Maidan protesters began in Odessa Oblast. Police reported that 5,000 participated in a pro-Russian demonstration in the city of Odessa on 1 March. Rolling demonstrations continued, and on 3 March 2014, 200–500 demonstrators with Russian flags attempted to seize the Odessa RSA building. They demanded that a referendum on the establishment of an "Odessa Autonomous Republic" be held.


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