The Russian Defence Ministry says it has information that Ukraine's security service is planning a provocation involving the use of poisonous substances, and that Kiev has received support in these efforts from members of the UN Security Council.
"We have it on good authority that, with the support of Western countries, the Security Service of Ukraine is preparing a provocation using poisonous substances against civilians. The purpose of this action is to accuse Russia of using chemical weapons against the people of Ukraine," MoD spokesman Igor Konashenkov said in a briefing Wednesday.
The spokesman noted that Russian forces were taking control of dangerous facilities inside Ukraine to prevent provocations and ensure their protection.
"Therefore, any attempt by the Security Service of Ukraine to carry out a provocation using poisonous substances will inevitably be uncovered," Konashenkov said.
The MoD spokesman also commented on the images coming out of the city of Chernigov, and media reports that Russian troops
"shot and killed 10 people queuing for bread" in the city.
"We would like to point out that alongside Ukrainian internet resources, this material appeared on the social media resources of the US Embassy in Ukraine without any checks or evidence. At the same time, the Embassy itself is situated in Lvov, not Kiev, and ignores Russian forces' delivery of hundreds of tonnes of humanitarian aid in those settlements freed of nationalist forces," he added.
Konashenkov also reported on Russian forces' operations for the day, saying precision strikes had wiped out communications, intelligence and relay centers in Vinnytsia, Ukraine, and shot down a Ukrainian Mi-24 gunship and six drones near the settlement of Sarana. Russian military aviation and drones also destroyed 34 military objects, including three command centers, according to the MoD spokesman. In total, Russia has destroyed 180 Ukrainian jets and helicopters, 166 drones, 1,367 tanks and armoured vehicles to date, he said.
Later Wednesday, the spokesman reported that "another bloody provocation" had been carried out by the Azov battalion in the beseiged city of Mariupol, with the neo-Nazi fighting unit feared to have blown up the city's famous drama theater building after rigging it with explosives.
Konashenkov said the MoD had been informed by refugees who managed to flee the city that Azov might hold civilians hostage in the theater building while using its upper floors as firing points.
Furthermore, the officer said, Russian military aviation did not carry out any strikes against ground targets in Mariupol on the afternoon of 16 March.
Konashenkov dismissed claims made by Kiev officials that Russia deliberately bombed the theater.
Mariupol's deputy mayor told the BBC that between 1,000 and 1,200 people were inside the drama theater at the time that it was destroyed. Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba accused Russia of responsibility and again called on the West to "stop Russian war criminals!'"