07 February 2015

Ukraine crisis: Leaders to put plan to Poroshenko

 
James Reynolds in Donetsk: "Rebels here have been building up the trappings of a state, they've got their own flags, border crossings and police".
 
 
The leaders of Russia, France and Germany have agreed in Moscow to work on a peace blueprint they will put to Ukraine's president on Sunday.
Russian President Vladimir Putin, France's Francois Hollande and German Chancellor Angela Merkel talked more than four hours on Friday.
All three parties described the meeting as "constructive and substantive".
They will discuss the plan for eastern Ukraine by phone with President Petro Poroshenko on Sunday.
The plan is thought to be an attempt to revive a September ceasefire, signed in Minsk in Belarus. Since then the rebels have seized more ground, raising alarm in Kiev and among Ukraine's backers.
Fighting has left nearly 5,400 people dead since April, the UN says. Russia is accused of arming and reinforcing pro-Russian separatists - claims it denies.
Some 1.2 million Ukrainians have fled their homes since last April, when the rebels seized a big swathe of the Luhansk and Donetsk regions following Russia's annexation of Crimea.
Events in Ukraine are also expected to feature prominently at a security conference in the German city of Munich.
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German Chancellor Angela Merkel with Russian President Vladimir Putin in Moscow, 6 February
Analysis: Bridget Kendall, BBC News, Moscow

There was no joint press conference or statement from the Russian, German and French leaders after such a high-profile Kremlin meeting. Chancellor Merkel and President Hollande left for the airport straight away. But if there was no breakthrough, there was also no breakdown.
Comments from officials from all three countries had clearly been co-ordinated. In Moscow, Paris and Berlin they all described the talks as substantive and constructive. They all noted that the three leaders, plus the president of Ukraine, would confer again by phone on Sunday.
And they all said work would continue on a possible blueprint for a deal, based on the French and German initiative, with added proposals from President Poroshenko and President Putin.
The fact that few details have been made public is probably positive. It suggests this is an attempt to negotiate seriously, without rhetoric and out of the public eye. But it also means we do not really know what is on the table, how far apart the various parties are and how fragile this latest mission to bring peace to Ukraine might be.

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Mrs Merkel, US Secretary of State John Kerry and Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov are all due to speak at the event.
It will not be what they say in public that matters but the private conversations in a raft of hastily arranged bilateral meetings behind closed doors, BBC diplomatic correspondent Jonathan Marcus reports.
'Totally open' The peace proposal Mr Hollande and Mrs Merkel took to Moscow on Friday was crafted with the Ukrainian government on Thursday.
Mr Hollande said the aim was not just a ceasefire but a "comprehensive agreement" - although Mrs Merkel said it was "totally open" whether that could be achieved.
A woman and a child look through a bus window before leaving as people flee the conflict in Debaltseve, eastern Ukraine, 6 February
Intense fighting in the strategic town of Debaltseve has forced many to flee their homes
 
Servicemen of volunteers battalion Azov rest inside of armoured personal carrier (APC) during their military training near Mariupol of Donetsk area, Ukraine, 6 February 2015
The US is considering providing the Ukrainian forces with defensive weapons

Pro-Russian rebels walk past a destroyed building in the town of Vuhlehirsk, Ukraine, 6 February 2015
Rebels say they have captured the town of Vuhlehirsk in Donetsk
 
Major questions any plan would have to address include the route of any new ceasefire line - given the rebel advances of recent weeks - how to enforce it, and the future status of the conflict zone, says the BBC's Sarah Rainsford in Moscow.
Moscow is still denying any direct role in the conflict, while Kiev insists above all that Ukraine must remain united, our correspondent says.
The Secretary General of Nato, Jens Stoltenberg, has told the BBC that Moscow's support for the rebels in Ukraine is growing.

"We see a combination of Russian equipment provided by the Russians but also Russian troops," he said.
"Especially we have seen an increase in the supply of heavy equipment - artillery, tanks, advanced air defence systems. And some of these equipments [sic] are very advanced, they can only come from Russia and they can only be operated by people who have a lot of training, a lot of skills. And that just underscores that there are Russian troops in eastern Ukraine."
Washington is considering Ukrainian pleas for better weaponry to fend off the rebels, raising European fears of an escalation in the conflict and spurring the latest peace bid.
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 Original post found here: http://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-31185027

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