Russia's Federal Security  Service (FSB) says it has detained 25 Ukrainians, accusing them of  planning terrorist attacks at about the time of last month's Crimean  referendum.
The FSB says they are members of ultra-nationalist movements and were preparing attacks inside Russia.
Ukraine's Security Service says Russian media reports that it had ordered any such attacks were "nonsense".
Tensions are high after Moscow's annexation of the Crimean peninsula.
Nato says Russia has tens of thousands of troops massed along its border with eastern Ukraine.
The BBC's Steven Rosenberg in Moscow says those detained by  the FSB reportedly include three members of the Ukrainian nationalist  group Right Sector. 
The Ukrainians have been accused of taking photographs of  Russian troop movements and of trying to make contact with extremist  elements in Russia. 
In a statement, the FSB said those being held had been  planning attacks between 14-17 March in Russia's Rostov, Volgograd,  Tver, Orel, Belgorod, Kalmykia and Tatarstan regions.
Earlier, government officials in Kiev levelled their own  accusations against Moscow, claiming that more than 30 FSB agents had  been involved in planning operations against anti-government protesters  in Kiev earlier this year.
Ukrainian Security Service chief Valentyn Nalyvaychenko also  said the FSB had sent "tonnes" of explosives and weapons by plane to  Ukraine.
More than 100 protesters were killed in unrest that started  last November when then President Viktor Yanukovych abandoned an  association deal with the EU in favour of closer ties with Russia.
Months of street protests ended when Mr Yanukovych fled Kiev in February and opposition leaders formed an interim government.
Ukraine's new authorities have since signed the political part of the association agreement with the EU.
Also on Thursday, Ukraine's Interior Minister Arsen Avakov  said an inquiry had shown that special police had been behind the  killings of anti-government protesters in Kiev in February. 
He said 12 members of the Berkut police had been identified as snipers and arrested.
He presented what he said was new evidence from the shootings on 18-20 February, when 76 people were killed.
  'Same gun'       
Mr Avakov said the inquiry had established that in one episode, eight of those killed were hit by bullets from the same gun. 
Most of the demonstrators who died were killed on Instytutska  Street near the main protest camp on Independence Square, widely known  as the Maidan.
Most of the demonstrators who died were killed on Instytutska Street, as Daniel Sandford reports from Kiev
Shortly after Mr Yanukovych's downfall, Russia annexed  Ukraine's Crimean peninsula following a referendum that Kiev and the  West have called illegal.
Prime Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk told the BBC that it was  "crystal clear" that President Yanukovych and his allies were  responsible for the killings of protesters - a claim denied by Mr  Yanukovych who is now in Russia.
In other developments on Thursday, Moscow raised the price of  its gas for Ukraine to $485 (£292) per 1,000 cubic metres - the second  hike in two days.
The European Parliament also backed a proposal to cut customs  duties on imports from Ukraine - a measure that is expected to save  Ukrainian firms 487m euros (£404m) per year.
 
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