Daily Sabah (Turkey)

With no end in sight, Ukraine conflict drags into sixth year

Despite reconcilia­tion attempts to settle the conflict in eastern Ukraine, the crisis continues to claim more civilian lives as they suffer under deteriorat­ing humanitari­an conditions

- BEGÜM TUNAKAN

MUELLER also said that in 2018 alone, “Eighty-nine incidents affected water and sanitation facilities and, in the last 12 months, 12 water workers were injured due to hostilitie­s and landmine explosions.”

“The parties to the conflict must take all feasible precaution­s to avoid, and in any event minimize, civilian harm,” she stressed, while calling on rival sides to be bound by internatio­nal humanitari­an law “to protect civilians and critical civilian infrastruc­ture, at all times, everywhere and by all parties.”

The U.N. establishe­d yesterday a special funding mechanism, the Ukraine Humanitari­an Pooled Fund, appealed for $162 million this year to aid 2.3 million people, aiming to restore their access to livelihood, essential services and critical structures, according to local media.

As over 500,000 civilians living within 5 kilometers of the contact line have been exposed to periodic shelling, gunfire, landmines and unexploded ordnance, many risks their lives at the checkpoint­s in eastern Donetsk and Luhansk, waiting for several hours in freezing temperatur­es to cross the line under poor humanitari­an conditions. Since December 2018, 14 people reportedly died from natural causes while waiting at checkpoint­s, Ertuğrul Apakan, chief of the Organizati­on for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) monitoring mission in Ukraine said, as reported by the Associated Press.

Ties between Ukraine and Russia further deteriorat­ed after Russia annexed the Crimean Peninsula in 2014 and backed separatist fighters in eastern Ukraine. The February 2015 Minsk Agreements, agreed by the leaders of Russia, Ukraine, France and Germany, set out the necessary steps to stop violence against civilians in eastern Ukraine, however, the U.N. has warned that the agreements have remained “largely unimplemen­ted.”

Assistant Secretary-General Miroslav Jenca told the U.N. Security Council that negotiatio­ns “appear to have lost momentum,” with Russia and Ukraine “either unable and, or unwilling to reach an agreement on the key steps forward or being distracted from focusing on the implementa­tion of agreed steps.”

“The conflict in Ukraine is first and foremost tragically affecting the Ukrainian people,” he said, but it also “continues to test the credibilit­y of internatio­nal and regional organizati­ons.”

In another sign of increasing tensions in the area, the military positions of both sides have come closer to each other in the “gray areas” near the socalled “contact line,” according to the OSCE monitoring mission.

The mediating efforts between European countries, Ukraine and Russia have led to no significan­t improvemen­t in ending the years-long pro-Russian separatist rebellion in eastern Ukraine. The peace talks could not produce a breakthrou­gh over issues relating to the settlement of the Ukraine crisis. The gap between the parties is still too wide to reconcile, therefore the conflictin­g interests at the heart of the Ukrainian crisis are preventing a sustainabl­e settlement between Kiev and the eastern Ukrainian separatist­s.

 ??  ?? A Ukraine army APC moves into position at an undisclose­d location in eastern Ukraine, Nov. 26, 2018.
A Ukraine army APC moves into position at an undisclose­d location in eastern Ukraine, Nov. 26, 2018.

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