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September 6, 2014

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Ukraine, rebels agree to cease-fire

UKRAINE’S president yesterday declared a cease-fire to end nearly five months of fighting in the nation’s east after his representatives reached a deal with Russian-backed rebels at peace talks.

Petro Poroshenko said he had ordered government forces to stop hostilities following a protocol signed by representatives of Ukraine, Russia, the rebels and the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe.

“I count on this agreement, including the ceasing of fire and the freeing of hostages, to be precisely observed,” Poroshenko said in a statement.

Heidi Tagliavini, of the OSCE, told reporters the deal reached at talks in Belarusian capital Minsk consisted of 12 points but she did not immediately spell them out before heading back into the talks.

“The cease-fire will allow us to save not only civilian lives, but also the lives of the people who took up arms in order to defend their land and ideals,” said Alexander Zakharchenko, the rebel leader from the Donetsk region.

But Igor Plotnitsky, the insurgent leader for the Luhansk region, told reporters “this doesn’t mean that our course for secession is over” — a statement that reflected deep divisions which threaten to derail the peace efforts.

Since mid-April, Moscow-backed separatists have been fighting government troops in eastern Ukraine in a conflict the UN estimates has killed nearly 2,600 people.

Yesterday morning, heavy shelling could be heard north and east of the key southeastern port of Mariupol.

The city of 500,000 lies on the Sea of Azov, between Russia to the east and the Crimean Peninsula to the west, which Russia annexed in March.

The shelling appeared to indicate rebels had partially surrounded the area and were probing its defenses.

The seizure of Mariupol would give the rebels a strong foothold on the Sea of Azov and raise the threat that they carve out a land corridor between Russia and Crimea. If that happened, Ukraine would lose another huge chunk of its coast and access to the rich hydrocarbon resources the Sea of Azov is believed to hold. Ukraine has already lost about half its coastline, several major ports and untold billions in Black Sea mineral rights with Russia’s annexation of Crimea.

The rebel offensive in the southeast follows two weeks of gains that have turned the tide of the war against Ukrainian forces, who until recently had appeared close to crushing the five-month rebellion.


 

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