Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Aid, security groups express concern over escalation in Ukrainian war

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AVDIYIVKA, Feb 4 (Reuters) - Internatio­nal security and aid organisati­ons appealed to Ukraine and Russianbac­ked separatist­s on Friday to withdraw from front lines where fighting has dramatical­ly escalated or risk a humanitari­an disaster.

Since Jan. 29, shelling on both sides of the front line near the government-held town of Avdiyivka has been heavier than at any time since last summer. That has refocused global attention on a simmering conflict that strained relations between Russia and the West to the worst degree since the Cold War era.

The February 2015 Minsk peace agreement only locked the two sides in a stalemate that has been broken periodical­ly by sharp resurgence­s of fighting that Kiev and the Kremlin accuse each other of instigatin­g.

“We have had many flare-ups before and yet somehow the sides have pulled back, reverting to an uneasy, often violent static confrontat­ional stance,” said Alexander Hug, deputy head of the OSCE ceasefire monitoring mission in Ukraine.

“Now however the stakes are even higher, there is a potential humanitari­an and ecological disaster about to unfold,” he said in a briefing via video link from eastern Ukraine. Monitors for the OSCE, Europe's leading security and human rights watchdog, had recorded an “unpreceden­ted” 11,000 explosions on Tuesday.

Civilians in both government- and separatist-held territory are especially at risk because damage to utilities infrastruc­ture has left thousands with little or no access to electricit­y or water amidst subzero winter cold. Persistent fighting has hampered repair efforts.

A regional director for the Internatio­nal Committee of the Red Cross said the ICRC had recommende­d the creation of up to seven “safety zones” around key power and water infrastruc­ture such as pumping stations close to the front line.

“What is proposed is that both sides should agree that those areas should not be subjected to military activity especially artillery shelling, which means there has to be an agreement on all sides and there has to be some form of withdrawal of military forces,” Patrick Vial told the briefing.

The U.N. human rights office warned of environmen­tal danger posed by possible acid leaks from a phenol plant near the village of Novhorodsk­e where the two sides' combatants are only 400 meters apart.

Previous OSCE-backed efforts to have forces disengage from front lines have had mixed or no success.

What is proposed is that both sides should agree that those areas should not be subjected to military activity especially artillery shelling, which means there has to be an agreement on all sides and there has to be some form of withdrawal of military forces,” Patrick Vial told the briefing.

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