Ukraine Crisis: Poroshenko Confirms Movement of Rebel Weapons
Ukrainian President, Petro Poroshenko, has said that pro-Russian rebels in the east have withdrawn a “significant” amount of heavy weapons.
Speaking on TV, Mr Poroshenko said his government forces had also pulled back “the lion’s share” of their rocket and heavy artillery systems.
Under a ceasefire reached in February both sides were due to pull back heavy weapons by the beginning of March.
The ceasefire appears to be taking hold despite continuing clashes.
The opposing sides have accused each other of breaking the truce or using it as a cover to regroup.
At least 6,000 people are believed to have been killed and more than one million have fled their homes since conflict erupted last April in the eastern regions of Donetsk and Luhansk.
In another development, Russian President Vladimir Putin admitted for the first time that the plan to annex Ukraine’s Crimea region last
March was ordered weeks before the referendum on self-determination.
Crimea was formally absorbed into Russia on 18 March, to international condemnation, after unidentified gunmen took over the peninsula.
Mr Putin said on TV he had ordered work on “returning Crimea” to begin at an allnight meeting on 22 February.
The meeting was called after Ukraine’s pro-Russian President, Viktor Yanukovych, was ousted from power in Kiev.
UK Foreign Secretary Philip Hammond will warn in a speech on Tuesday that President Putin’s policies “fundamentally undermine the security of sovereign nations in Eastern Europe”.
By“illegally annexing Crimea and now using Russian troops to destabilise eastern Ukraine”, the Russian leader was “bent not on joining the international rules-based system which keeps the peace between nations, but on subverting it,” the foreign secretary will said.
Three days ago, President Poroshenko accused the rebels in eastern Ukraine of reluctance to withdraw heavy weapons under international supervision, in accordance with the terms of the ceasefire agreed in the Belarussian capital Minsk.
But on Monday he said: “Ukraine has withdrawn the lion’s share of its rocket and heavy artillery systems.
The Russian-backed fighters have also withdrawn a significant amount.”
As for the truce itself, he said, “There is a ceasefire or there isn’t - it depends on how you look at it.”,Since 15 February, when the ceasefire officially began, 64 Ukrainian servicemen have been killed, he added.
In all, the Ukrainian leader said, 1,549 Ukrainian soldiers have been killed since the rebellion began.
Observers from the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe are monitoring the ceasefire agreed in Minsk, Belarus, on 12 February.
The two sides are due to create a buffer zone between them of at least 50km (30 miles) for artillery of 100mm calibre or more, 70km for multiple rocket systems and 140km for the heaviest rockets and missiles.