Anton Skiba, CNN freelancer, abducted in Ukraine - Action News
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Anton Skiba, CNN freelancer, abducted in Ukraine

A Ukrainian journalist working as a fixer for the U.S. news network CNN was abducted by pro-Russia separatists in Eastern Ukraine two days ago, CNN reports.

Ukrainian journalist Anton Skiba works as fixer for U.S. network, abducted outside hotel in Donetsk

An armed pro-Russian separatist stands guard as monitors from the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe and a team of Malaysian air crash investigators inspect the site of downed Malaysia Airlines Flight MH17, near the village of Hrabove (Grabovo) in the Donetsk region on Tuesday. The OSCE has called for the return of abducted Ukrainian journalist Anton Skiba, who was taken by pro-Russia separatists while freelancing for CNN in Donetsk. (Maxim Zmeyev/Reuters)

A Ukrainian journalist working as a fixer for the U.S. news network CNN was abducted by pro-Russia separatists in Eastern Ukraine two days ago, CNN reported today.

AntonSkiba was takenoutside the DonbassPalace hotel in the rebel-controlled eastern city ofDonetsk. He had worked for one day as a local fixer with a CNN television crew.

The network was in Ukraine covering the crash of Malaysia Airlines Flight MH17, which is believed to have been shot down in Eastern Ukraine last Thursday, killing 298 people.

CNN reported that as Skiba and the network's crew returned to the hotel from the crash siteTuesday evening, armed men approached Skiba, accused him of terrorism and calling for the death of pro-Russian separatists on Facebook, and then escorted him to a waiting car.

"Since his detention, CNN has attempted through a number of different separatist officials, including the office of the self-declared separatist Prime Minister Alexander Borodai, to secure Skiba's freedom," an article on the CNN website said.

"CNN chose not to report his abduction at the time while making efforts to obtain his release. That has not happened to date, so CNN is now publicly asking those who are holding Skiba to release him immediately."

A photo of the Donbass Palace hotel in the eastern Ukrainian city of Donetsk taken in September 2011. Anton Skiba was abducted outside the hotel Tuesday evening. (Gleb Garanich/Reuters)

CNN reported that Skiba's abductors includedAlexandr Kalyussky, a deputy prime minister in the separatist-formed government that controls the rebel-held eastern region of Ukraine, which the separatists have dubbedthe Donetsk People's Republic.

Kalyussky is one of the people named on the European Union's list of Russian and Ukrainian citizens againstwhich it has imposed economic sanctions because of the ongoing conflict in the country.

Donetsk province is one of the eastern regions of Ukraineat the centre of several months of violent clashes between pro-Russia separatists and Ukrainian nationalists that support the central government that came into power after the ousting ofViktorYanukovychin February. Donetsk is the administrative capital of the region and about 50 kilometres west of the MH17 crash site.

Several organizations have condemned Skiba's abduction and called for his release, including the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE), which has been monitoring the situationin Ukraine, and the Committee to Protect Journalists.

Graham Phillips, a British freelancer for the 24-hour Russian-based television network Russia Today, has also been missing since Tuesday, according to the Committee to Protect Journalists.

RT, which is state funded, reported on its website that Phillips and a cameraman with the ANNA news agency were captured and tortured by Ukrainian forces.

The ANNA cameraman, Vadim Aksyonov, was reportedly released, and later gave an interview to RT.

"We were taken by people with guns. I saw the official army insignia before they put bags on our heads," the website quoted Aksyonov as saying.