I/III.
http://www.themoscowtimes.com/news/article/shaky-cease-fire-takes-hold-in-ukraine/506563.htmlShaky
Cease-Fire Takes Hold in UkraineBy Alexey Eremenko   Sep. 07 2014 20:16
Last edited 20:1
Maxim Shemetov / ReutersRebels guarding a Donetsk checkpoint on Saturday as
an uneasy calm crept back into the region after a cease-fire agreement
entered into effect Friday.

A tense armistice was settled in Ukraine over the weekend after official
Kiev agreed to pardon the pro-Russian rebels and grant autonomy to the
territories they hold.

Sporadic infighting continued despite the OSCE-negotiated truce, but
large-scale hostilities ceased, to the satisfaction of the Russian
and Ukrainian presidents.

But a long-term solution to the conflict remains murky, given the rebels'
vows that they are not giving up on independence, the matter at the heart
of the war that has raged in eastern Ukraine for the past five months.

The cease-fire came into effect at 3 p.m. Friday following a meeting of the
Tripartite Contact Group -- comprised of representatives for Russia, Ukraine
and the OSCE -- in the Belarussian capital of Minsk.

The OSCE published the Minsk Protocol, a list of 12 conditions for the
cease-fire, which was also signed by the rebels. The conditions include:

an end to hostilities;

a decentralization of authority and snap regional elections in the Donetsk
and Luhansk regions (collectively known as Donbass), the hotbed of the
insurgency;

pardons for all of the conflict's participants;

the pull-out of all militants, mercenaries and "illegal military
formations" from Ukraine;

the release of all "hostages."

The list also advocates the establishment of a dialogue, promotes
humanitarian and economic relief to Donbass and spells out the OSCE's role
in monitoring the peace effort.

The document was signed by Ukrainian ex-president Leonid Kuchma, Russian
envoy in Kiev Mikhail Zurabov, OSCE Ambassador Heidi Tagliavini and two
rebel representatives.

The deal comes shortly after a meeting and a phone conversation between
Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko and President Vladimir Putin, who has
long battled accusations of having backed the rebels.
Shooting Goes On

The rebels largely appeared to end their advance on Mariupol,
a strategically located Black Sea coastal city they besieged last week.

But the insurgents and Ukrainian forces both reported shelling of their
positions in Mariupol over the weekend.

The Ukrainian army continued to fortify the city, Interior Minister Arsen
Avakov said Sunday.

Ukraine also secured arms supply deals with NATO members France, Italy,
Poland, Norway and the U.S., Poroshenko's adviser Yuriy Lutsenko said
on his Facebook on Sunday, though the Norwegian Defense Ministry denied any
such plans, according to TASS. The U.S. and Poland likewise denied having
secured such a deal, Gazeta.ru reported.

Blasts were also reported by the Donetsk airport, where the separatists
have cut off and isolated a Ukrainian army contingent.

A humanitarian aid convoy was unable to reach Luhansk on Saturday because
of shelling by an undetermined party, the International Red Cross said
on Twitter.

Nevertheless, Putin and Poroshenko on Saturday "expressed mutual
satisfaction over the fact that the cease-fire regime is largely holding,"
according to the Kremlin's website.

The chain of command is incomplete on both sides, which could account
for the cease-fire violations. Some of the separatist commanders are
de-facto independent of the main force, and the Ukrainian army is aided
by volunteers and privately raised battalions.

The first two "hostages" -- Ukrainian soldiers captured by the insurgents --
were released on Saturday, a spokesman for Poroshenko said, Interfax
reported.

The OSCE contact group in Minsk said the rebels and Ukrainian forces could
be holding up to 1,000 prisoners each, expected to be exchanged under
an "everyone for everyone" deal.
Independence in the Air

The pithy Minsk Protocol left much room for interpretation, including
on the main question underlying the civil war, the status of the rebel-held
territories.

Insurgent leader Igor Plotnitsky, who co-signed the protocol, de-facto
disavowed it right after signing, saying in Minsk that the separatists
stand by their strategic goal of obtaining independence.

By Sunday, he had relented somewhat, reiterating the insurgency's demand
for independence in an interview with RIA Novosti, but adding that
the rebels "were willing to compromise [on independence] for the sake
of peace."

Kiev should guarantee the Donbass region the right to maintain Russian as
an official language, build economic ties with Russia and create armed
militias as part of the decentralization of power deal, Plotnitsky also
said.

The Ukrainian leadership had not commented on Plotnitsky's statements as
of Sunday.

Ukraine is set to hold snap parliamentary elections by October 26, wherein
Poroshenko -- a war president elected in May on his promise to crush
the insurgency -- hopes to take control of the Verkhovna Rada, the country's
parliament.
Following Crimea

The insurgency in eastern Ukraine broke out soon after Russia's annexation
in March of Crimea, a largely Russian-speaking peninsula in the Black Sea.

The rebels, whose leadership -- until recently -- had consisted largely
of Russian nationalists, said they wanted Donbass to follow Crimea's
example and join Russia.

But after a number of early triumphs, their military effort began
to struggle between Ukraine's rapidly bolstering army forces, and the
reluctance of eastern Ukrainian locals to take up arms and fight
for secession.

However, the rebels achieved a sudden breakthrough in late August, routing
the Ukrainian forces and clutching a foothold on the Black Sea coast.

The separatist command credited their achievements to their own battle
spirit and the Ukrainian army's mistakes.

But official Kiev, NATO and the U.S. all said, with various degree
of certainty, that the victory was due to Russia sending a limited
contingent of elite forces to the rebels' aid.

Amnesty International was the latest organization to blame Russia
of "direct interference" in the conflict in a report out on Friday.

The Kremlin denied involvement despite a wealth of evidence, down
to Russian paratroopers captured in the combat area.

Russia deployed its troops to Crimea, but denied it until the annexation
was complete. Some of the soldiers sent to Crimea have been reported
by media as recently slain in eastern Ukraine.
Amnesty Blames

At least 2,900 have died in eastern Ukraine and about 600,000 have been
displaced since the outbreak of hostilities in April, according to the UN's
latest figures published on Friday.

Both sides have also engaged in a fierce information war, accusing each
other of atrocities.

And indeed, both sides appear to have committed war crimes, the Amnesty
International report said.

On the Ukrainian side, the main offenses were indiscriminate shellings
of urban territories where the rebels had set up bases,
the London-headquartered watchdog said.

As for the rebels, the report said that "witnesses [among locals] also said
that separatist fighters abducted, tortured, and killed their neighbors."
Contact the author at [email protected]

II/III.
http://news.sky.com/story/1331554/fresh-fighting-threatens-ukraine-ceasefire
Fresh Fighting Threatens Ukraine Ceasefire
A series of explosions are heard near Mariupol and around Donetsk airport
less than two days after a truce began.Explosions have been heard for a
second night near the port city of Mariupol in eastern Ukraine.

Sky's Katie Stallard said the explosions sound like heavy artillery fire,
adding the exchanges will further threaten the region's tentative ceasefire.

"We can hear a series of explosions, again in the same direction towards
the east of the city," Stallard said.

"We know that the rebels really are very close now, and the two sides are
about 15kms apart.

"It is difficult to tell whether it's incoming or outgoing, but it is both
the kind of deep explosions of artillery and salvos of what sound like
rocket fire."
A car with bullet-hole ridden windows on the outskirts of Mariupol

The fresh fighting comes after an attack overnight on government forces
near the city, and shelling near Donetsk, which put the ceasefire in east
Ukraine at risk.

Plumes of smoke could be seen rising above Donetsk airport on Sunday, which
had been occupied by government forces.

One woman died and four others were injured during renewed shelling in the
port of Mariupol, city officials said.

Local media said a 33-year-old woman was the first civilian killed since
the ceasefire began on Friday evening.

The ceasefire in Ukraine had largely been holding since it came into force
on Friday at 4pm UK time, although there had been sporadic reports of
skirmishes from both sides.

Many on the ground had expressed scepticism about its durability, and both
sides blamed each other for renewing the fighting.
Mariupol and Donetsk have both seen violence in the last 24 hours

Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko said he had spoken to his Russian
counterpart Vladimir Putin by phone on Saturday to discuss ways to make the
ceasefire agreement more durable.

The West and Kiev accuse Moscow of supporting the rebels by sending tanks
and troops over the border, although the Kremlin has consistently denied
the allegations.

Russia issued a separate statement on Saturday warning European leaders of
an unspecified "reaction" if the European Union followed through with its
decision to impose further sanctions.

The sanctions were agreed at the two-day Nato summit of world leaders in
Wales.

Prime Minister David Cameron indicated they could be suspended if Russia
withdraws its troops from Ukraine and the ceasefire is observed.

III.
http://www.themoscowtimes.com/business/article/eu-to-implement-new-sanctions-against-russia-despite-ukraine-cease-fire/506601.html
EU to Implement New Sanctions Against Russia Despite Ukraine Cease-Fire

   - Reuters
   - Sep. 08 2014 15:03
   - Last edited 15:03

 The European Union will press ahead with implementing new sanctions
on Russia later on Monday despite a shaky ceasefire in Ukraine,
the European Commission said.

"The package is due to be formally implemented by the member states through
a written procedure later today," Commission spokeswoman Pia
Ahrenkilde-Hansen told reporters.

*More updates soon.*

*See also:*

Medvedev: Russia Could Close Airspace If West Brings New Sanctions
<http://www.themoscowtimes.com/article.php?id=506573>



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