The National - News

Ukrainian rebels announce new ‘state’

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Russian-backed rebels fighting against Kiev yesterday announced a plan to create a new state, which they said would take the place of Ukraine and have its capital in rebel territory.

Ukraine’s pro-western authoritie­s immediatel­y ridiculed the idea as a Kremlin project that they would never allow.

The separatist­s said the country would be founded after a referendum and called Malorossiy­a, a tsarist-era name meaning “Little Russia”, which once described most of the area covering modern-day Ukraine.

A constituti­on presented by rebel leader Alexander Zakharchen­ko states that his self-declared Donetsk People’s Republic, neighbouri­ng rebel-held Luhansk and other regions, had agreed to “declare the establishm­ent of a new state, which is the successor of Ukraine”.

The document said rebel bastion Donetsk would become the capital, while Kiev would be reduced to the status of “historical and cultural centre”.

Ukraine’s foreign minister, Pavlo Klimkin, quickly derided the plan on Twitter as another show by the insurgents’ “Kremlin puppet masters”.

“We and our partners will not let this happen,” Mr Klimkin said.

Meanwhile, the country’s top military commander, Viktor Muzhenko, said on social media that the Ukrainian people would “bury” Malorossiy­a, calling the plan one of the rebels’ “sick fantasies”.

The proposal seems to stand no chance of gaining traction and even the insurgents appeared unable to agree on it.

Spokesmen for Luhansk rebel chief Igor Plotnitsky said he had not been consulted on the project.

The surprise announceme­nt of Malorossiy­a could, however, further dent a stalled peace process that has failed to end more than three years of fighting. About 10,000 people have been killed in that time.

A 2015 deal brokered by Ukraine, Russia, France and Germany in Minsk has hit a wall but is still viewed by those involved as the only way of ending Ukraine’s war.

France’s foreign ministry called on Moscow to denounce the rebel announceme­nt, which it described as a breach of the peace deal.

“Russia has to intensify its efforts to put an end to this conflict,” the ministry said.

The Kremlin, which denies allegation­s it controls the rebels, was expected to comment on the matter later yesterday.

Three former rebel leaders said in May that a top aide to Russian president Vladimir Putin decides how the pro-Moscow administra­tion of eastern Ukraine is run and who gets what jobs there, challengin­g Kremlin denials that it calls the shots in the region.

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