The Daily Telegraph

Ceasefire breaches fuel tensions between Ukraine and Russia

- By Roland Oliphant

‘We hope all our partners will use their influence to prevent this escalation from crossing a dangerous line’

THE Kremlin yesterday warned that the frozen war in eastern Ukraine was on the brink of dangerous escalation as Moscow and Kyiv blamed one another for a recent surge in violence.

Dmitry Peskov, Vladimir Putin’s spokesman, yesterday accused Kyiv’s forces of shelling in breach of the ceasefire agreement and entering areas where they were not meant to be.

He said Russia, which officially denies deploying its own troops to the area, was using its influence to restrain pro-russian forces and called on France and Germany to do the same for Ukraine

“We also hope all our partners … will pay attention to the growing tension on the contact line and will use their influence to prevent this escalation from crossing a dangerous line,” Mr Peskov said. “A red line would be the resumption of full-scale hostilitie­s,” he said.

Russia and Ukraine have been in a state of undeclared war since 2014, when the Kremlin annexed Crimea and sent weapons and troops to support a separate uprising in Ukraine’s eastern Donbass region. At least 14,000 people have died in the war to date.

Intense fighting ended following a ceasefire in early 2015, but there have been repeated skirmishes along the line of contact over the past six years.

A stricter ceasefire introduced last summer stopped most tit-for-tat shelling, but the pace of violations has grown in recent weeks and at least 10 Ukrainian soldiers have been killed so far this year.

On Wednesday, the self-proclaimed Donetsk People’s Republic, the Russian-backed breakaway statelet in east

Ukraine, said it had authorised its forces to pre-emptively fire on Ukrainian positions in response to what it said were Ukrainian ceasefire violations.

Ukraine’s military yesterday accused pro-russian forces of shelling its positions to provoke them into returning fire. It said Russian-backed forces had violated the ceasefire four times within 24 hours.

Leonid Kravchuk, the first president of Ukraine and head of the country’s delegation to a trilateral contact group with Russia and the OSCE, said Ukrainian forces would answer enemy fire “symmetrica­lly”.

He earlier accused Russia of escalating the military confrontat­ion in response to a series of moves by Volodymyr Zelenskiy, the president of Ukraine, to challenge Russia off the battlefiel­d.

They include the decision last month to revoked the broadcast licences of three television channels owned by Taras Kozak, a politician from a prorussian opposition party.

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