July 24, 2020

Hostage-taking ends after 12-hour standoff

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LUTSK, Ukraine – A tense hostage situation on a bus in western Ukraine has ended without casualties after a standoff with police and after President Volodymyr Zelenskyy spoke with the hostage-taker by phone and agreed to one of his demands.

Police arrested the suspected hostage taker, whom the Security Service of Ukraine (SBU) identified as 44-year-old Maksym Kryvosh and said he had propagated “extremist views.”

Internal Affairs Minister Arsen Avakov said Mr. Kryvosh was armed with guns and a grenade, adding to the concerns of security forces during the 12-hour standoff.

The hostages were freed after an armored personnel carrier with special forces pulled up alongside the bus at around 9:30 p.m., seconds after an explosion created a bright flash near the vehicle, a video posted by an onlooker showed.

Officials said Mr. Kryvosh was a two-time convict who also went by the last name “Plokhoy,” which means “bad” in Russian.

Police said Mr. Kryvosh ranted against “the system” in his negotiations, called the country’s oligarchs and officials “terrorists,” and demanded that people watch the 2005 documentary film “Earthlings” about the suffering endured by animals at farms, research labs and other locations.

In response, Mr. Zelenskyy posted a short video on Facebook recommending that people watch the documentary. Local media said Mr. Kryvosh was following the news about his hostage-taking on his smartphone.

The president deleted the video after Mr. Kryvosh’s capture. He said he had spoken to Mr. Kryvosh for around seven to 10 minutes and persuaded him to release three of the hostages, including a pregnant woman. Mr. Zelenskyy then agreed to publish the short video.

“We agreed that he would release three people and after that I will record a video,” Mr. Zelenskyy said.

“I congratulate all those who fought all day for the release of the people in Lutsk and, in fact, for their lives,” the president said in a statement after the hostages were freed.

Regional police chief Yuriy Kroshko said earlier in the day that Mr. Kryvosh had told police that he was armed and had a large number of explosives with him. He also claimed to have placed a bomb at another site in the city and said he could detonate it remotely.

The SBU published a picture of Mr. Kryvosh lying face down with security personnel standing over him after his arrest. Internal Affairs Minister Avakov said an accomplice was detained in the eastern city of Kharkiv.

 

With reporting by Suspilne, UNIAN, Volynski Novyny, Ukrayinska Pravda, and the Kyiv Post.

Copyright 2020, RFE/RL Inc. Reprinted with the permission of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, 1201 Connecticut Ave. NW, Washington DC 20036; www.rferl.org (see https://www.rferl.org/a/armed-man-in-ukrainian-city-of-lutsk-takes-bus-passengers-hostage/30739110.html).