The Commercial Appeal

Ukraine accord faces defiance

Pro-Russian insurgents won’t leave buildings

-

DONETSK, Ukraine — ProRussian insurgents defiantly refused Friday to surrender their weapons or give up government buildings in eastern Ukraine, despite a diplomatic accord reached in Geneva and overtures from the government in Kiev.

Denis Pushilin of the self-appointed Donetsk People’s Republic told reporters the insurgents in more than 10 cities do not recognize Ukraine’s interim government as legitimate and will not leave the buildings until the government resigns.

He demanded that Ukrainian leaders abandon their own public buildings.

Talks between Ukraine, Russia, the United States and the European Union produced an agreement Thursday in Geneva to take tentative steps toward calming tensions in Ukraine.

The country’s former leader fled to Russia in February and Russia annexed Crimea in March.

The Geneva agreement calls for disarming all paramilita­ry groups and returning all government buildings seized across the country.

Pushilin, speaking at the insurgent-occupied regional headquarte­rs in the eastern city of Donetsk, said the agreement was “reasonable” but insisted “everyone should vacate the buildings,” including Arseniy Yatsenyuk and Oleksandr Turchynov, the acting Ukrainian prime minister and president.

Ukraine has scheduled a presidenti­al election for May 25, but Pushilin reiterated a call to hold a referendum on self-determinat­ion for the Donetsk region by May 11. The same kind of referendum in Crimea led to its annexation by Russia.

In a sign that Ukraine’s f ledging government is ready to meet some of the protesters’ demands, the acting president and prime minister issued a joint statement Friday saying the Ukrainian government is “ready to conduct a comprehens­ive constituti­onal reform that will secure powers of the regions,” giving them a greater say in local governance.

They also pledged “a special status to the Russian language” and vowed to protect the rights of all citizens whatever language they spoke.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States