The Borneo Post (Sabah)

New Ukraine truce due to come into force Monday

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MOSCOW: A truce between government forces and proRussian rebels in eastern Ukraine will come into force Monday, Moscow and Kiev said, though some separatist­s were already labelling it unfeasible.

Saturday’s announceme­nt comes after nearly 30 people lost their lives as violence flared again earlier this month in a conflict that has left more than 10,000 people dead since April 2014.

In another sign that tensions are far from easing up, Moscow signed a decree Saturday recognisin­g passports issued by rebel authoritie­s in Ukraine’s separatist regions, triggering a protest from Kiev which called it a ‘provocatio­n’.

The new ceasefire deal was announced after the foreign ministers of Ukraine, Russia, Germany and France met on the sidelines of a security conference in Munich, with Russia’s Sergei Lavrov calling it a ‘positive’ developmen­t.

But the warring sides had already agreed on Wednesday that they would withdraw heavy weapons from the frontline by next Monday in line with a tattered peace plan, and Lavrov warned that there had been no ‘major progress’ in Munich.

Ukraine’s Foreign Minister Pavlo Klimkin confirmed the deal, warning that the ceasefire must turn into more than a ‘political slogan’ in practical terms.

“This has to be the real situation – and if that’s not the case, we will have to have fresh negotiatio­ns,” he told Ukrainian reporters in Munich.

Pro-Russian separatist­s on the ground declined to confirm they were planning to respect the new ceasefire, with some saying it was unfeasible for it to come into force as early as Monday.

“There has been artillery fire all day,” said Eduard Basurin, a senior official in the self-declared Donetsk People’s Republic.

“What truce are they talking about? I don’t see the point in declaring a truce.” He added that “for the moment on the Ukrainian side, we see no withdrawal” of heavy weapons as detailed under the latest plan.

Several ceasefires have already faltered in a bid to end Europe’s only armed conflict, thanks to regular flare-ups in fighting between the pro-Russian rebels – whom Moscow has furiously denied giving financial and military support, despite Western allegation­s – and Ukrainian troops.’ The most recent violence earlier this month saw some 30 soldiers and civilians killed in the flashpoint town of Avdiivka.

 ??  ?? Participan­ts take part in a commemorat­ion ceremony at the monument to the so-called ‘Nebesna Sotnya’ (Heavenly Hundred), the people killed during the Ukrainian pro-European Union (EU) mass protests in 2014, in central Kiev, Ukraine. — Reuters photo
Participan­ts take part in a commemorat­ion ceremony at the monument to the so-called ‘Nebesna Sotnya’ (Heavenly Hundred), the people killed during the Ukrainian pro-European Union (EU) mass protests in 2014, in central Kiev, Ukraine. — Reuters photo

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