Ukraine truce hangs in balance after ‘difficult’ talks

The latest push for peace in Ukraine appeared moribund on Thursday after initial talks failed to agree when the warring sides should meet again to try ending the eight-month pro-Russian revolt.

By (AFP)

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Published: Thu 25 Dec 2014, 7:38 PM

Last updated: Sat 4 Apr 2015, 12:18 AM

Negotiations mediated by European and Russian envoys in the Belarussian capital Minsk broke up after more than five hours on Wednesday with the separatists reporting progress on only one of the four points.

That scuppered a plan for both sides to gather again on Friday in order to sign a comprehensive agreement reinforcing a September 5 truce deal that was followed by 1,300 more deaths.

Donetsk separatist leader Alexander Zakharchenko told reporters on Thursday that the “very difficult” process now involved videoconference consultations that should stretch into the weekend.

Zakharchenko and his Lugansk separatist region counterpart Igor Plotnitsky both said that an agreement on the terms of a prisoner swap involving nearly 400 fighters was the only tangible achievement of Wednesday’s talks.

The Donetsk commander said the sides had decided to try and save the peace process by launching Skype video consultations.

Sharply contrasting visions of Ukraine’s place in Europe and its system of government have been persistently blocking a solution to the protracted war.

The two Russian-border provinces rose up against the historic shift toward Europe that Kiev made in the wake of February’s ouster of an unpopular Moscow-backed president.

The separatist commanders have since declared their own republics and will settle for no less than Ukraine becoming a loose federation in which they manage most of their own affairs.

This option is backed firmly by Russia but rejected by Ukrainian nationalists who make up an important part of President Petro Poroshenko’s government.

Ukraine has remained tightly centralised since independence and is only now considering easing its hold over the country’s regions in order to stem public resentment over the relative prosperity enjoyed in Kiev.

Such problems undermined two deals reached in Minsk in September that Poroshenko was forced into after the rebels mounted a surprisingly effective counteroffensive.

Nato believes the rebel surge was backed by crack Russian forces and tanks that were witnessed by reporters on the ground at the time.

But Russian President Vladimir Putin denies sending in his army and calls soldiers who had crossed into the war zone volunteers who were “answering the call of the heart”.

The overall toll in the Ukraine conflict — Europe’s bloodiest since the Balkan wars of the 1990s — now stands at more than 4,700.

But UN officials fear the true number may be much higher because the militias have been hiding their losses and denying outsiders’ access to their burial sites.

The biggest immediate issue for the rebels is to make sure that Kiev resumes social welfare payments it suspended last month out of fear that they were being used to fund the revolt.

Russia’s Kiev ambassador Mikhail Zurabov — Moscow’s envoy at the talks who defends the insurgents’ stance — said “economic” problems had been one of the four main points on the agenda.

But Ukraine appeared unwilling to budge.

A source close to the Kiev delegation said the rebels pressed demands on Wednesday that went far outside the scope of the original Minsk deal.

“If continue these consultations, it should only be in order to sign the Minsk (deal) and to develop them further — and not to revise them, which if what the Donetsk and Lugansk representatives tried to do,” the source told the Interfax-Ukraine news agency.

Adding to the tensions was the Ukrainian parliament’s decision this week to officially drop the neutrality the country adopted under Russian pressure in 2010.

The ceremonial shift in Kiev’s diplomatic allegiance was in line with Poroshenko’s vow to put Ukraine under Western military protection in the face of Russian threats.

Ukraine sought Nato membership in the early post-Soviet era but was never viewed as a serious candidate.

The February change of regime in Kiev upset Putin’s plans to get Ukraine to join a new bloc that Moscow hopes will counterbalance Nato and the European Union.

Moscow had also set Kiev’s exclusion from all military unions as a condition for any Minsk deal.


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