Kiev, Ukraine (CNN) -- A ceasefire between the Ukrainian government and
separatist leaders appeared to be holding Saturday, a rare positive sign in a
conflict that has ratcheted up tensions between Russia and the West.
Ukrainian forces and pro-Russian
rebels have battled in eastern Ukraine since April, leaving more than 2,200
people dead, according to the United Nations.
A truce deal signed Friday after
talks in Minsk, the capital of Belarus, went into effect Friday evening local
time.
After
roughly five months of bitter fighting between Ukrainian government forces and
pro-Russian rebel groups, the question is whether the ceasefire will last.
Ukrainian National Security and
Defense Council spokesman Col. Andriy Lysenko told reporters in Kiev on
Saturday that the situation was calmer than before but that there had been a
number of "provocations" by rebels.
These include 10 instances of
shelling in the Donetsk and Luhansk regions, he said.
Lysenko said a prisoner exchange
would begin soon without specifying a time and date.
Artillery fire and explosions were
heard in the flashpoint city of Donetsk around the time the ceasefire went into
effect, the city's website said. But there have been no subsequent reports of
major incidents.
A CNN team in southeastern Ukraine,
where Ukrainian forces and the rebels have engaged in fierce fighting this week
between the Ukrainian border town of Novoazovsk and the port city of Mariupol,
said that artillery fire appeared to have stopped after the start of the truce.
Despite the ceasefire deal, Russian
President Vladimir Putin remains under international pressure over Russia's
actions in Ukraine.
Hours after the guns stopped firing,
EU leaders meeting in Brussels, Belgium, agreed on a new round of economic
sanctions against Russian interests. They are due to be formally adopted on
Monday.
Russia's Foreign Ministry warned Saturday
that if new EU sanctions are imposed, Russia "certainly will
respond," Russian state-run news agency Itar-Tass reported.
Obama expresses support for Ukraine
U.S. President Barack Obama said he
was hopeful but skeptical that the ceasefire would hold, questioning whether
pro-Russian rebels would adhere to it.
Obama, speaking at the end of a NATO
summit in Wales, added that NATO was "fully united in support of Ukraine's
sovereignty, independence, territorial integrity and ability to defend
itself."
Member nations would send nonlethal
military aid and help modernize Ukraine's security forces, while the United
States and European allies finalize measures "to deepen and broaden
sanctions" against Russia, he said.
The Ukrainian government and the
West accuse Moscow of backing the rebels with arms and troops -- claims that
Moscow has repeatedly denied.
The conflict has sparked a
humanitarian crisis in eastern Ukraine, where homes and infrastructure have
been destroyed by shelling. Nationwide, more than a million people have been
displaced from their homes by the fighting, most of them in the east.
Russia has contacted the
International Committee of the Red Cross to express its readiness to deliver a
second aid convoy to Ukraine, state news agency RIA Novosti reported Saturday,
quoting Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Gennady Gatilov.
"We are now discussing the
practical details of this operation and expect it to be accomplished,"
Gatilov is quoted as saying.
Gatilov said he could not discuss
details but that this time humanitarian aid would be delivered by railroad. The
last Russian aid convoy, which entered without Ukraine's permission, was sent
by road.
Ukraine ready for 'significant
steps'
Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko
said the ceasefire deal was based on his peace plan and an agreement reached in
a phone call this week with Putin.
"We are ready to provide
significant steps, including the decentralization of power," he said, as
well as greater economic freedoms for the Luhansk and Donetsk regions and guarantees
that their culture and language be respected. Many people in eastern Ukraine
are Russian speakers.
Poroshenko said the exchange of
"hostages," or prisoners, could begin as soon as Saturday.
He said he hoped the ceasefire,
based on a 12-point plan, would lead to more substantial talks on core issues
and a lasting peace.
The talks in Minsk brought together
the leaders of the separatist groups with former Ukrainian President Leonid
Kuchma, as well as Russia's Ukrainian envoy.
The ceasefire, however, does not
mean the end of the self-styled Donetsk People's Republic and the Luhansk
People's Republic, separatist leaders said at a televised news conference after
signing the deal.
Poroshenko has asked his foreign
minister and the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe, which
already has international observers in Ukraine, to monitor compliance with the
ceasefire.
A previous unilateral ceasefire
declared by the Ukrainian government in June broke down after 10 days.
New sanctions planned
Amid skepticism over Russia's
intentions, the European Union agreed a fresh round of sanctions Friday against
Russian interests, though they are not yet in force.
The package includes "enhanced
measures related to access to capital markets, defense, dual use goods, and
sensitive technologies," an EU statement said.
It also includes sanctions against
the rebel leadership in eastern Ukraine, the government of Crimea, annexed by
Russia in March, and Russian decision makers and oligarchs, it said.
EU foreign policy chief Catherine
Ashton welcomed the ceasefire, adding that it must now be respected by all
sides.
"We hope that this will be a
first step toward a sustainable political solution, based on respect for
Ukraine's sovereignty and territorial integrity," she said.
"Permanent monitoring of the
Russian-Ukrainian border and withdrawal of illegal armed groups and forces
illegally operating on Ukrainian territory should be integral parts of such a
solution."
The European Union is ready to
support monitoring efforts, including by the OSCE, she said.
British Prime Minister David
Cameron, who hosted the NATO summit in Wales, said in his final remarks that
what Putin was doing is "indefensible and wrong" and that Russia
should face further economic costs.
Western countries in July stepped up
targeted sanctions against Russia, prompting a retaliatory ban by Moscow on
certain imports.
Putin has voiced sympathy for the
separatists, many of whom are ethnic Russians. But he denies that Russia has
armed and trained the rebels, or sent Russian troops over the border.
Ceasefire in effect in eastern Ukraine after talks between government, rebels |
No comments:
Post a Comment