Special status to E. Ukraine regions, amnesty to combatants - parliament

Published time: September 16, 2014 09:33 
Edited time: September 16, 2014 10:41 

Get short URL <http://rt.com/news/188124-rada-donbass-status-amnesty/>  

The Ukrainian parliament has approved laws on special status for the Donetsk 
and Lugansk Regions, as well as amnesty for those participating in the 
hostilities.

The special status law has received 277 ‘yes’ votes from a total of 450 MPs, 
while the amnesty law was approved by 287 parliamentary members. The session of 
the Verkhovna Rada is underway during which MPs are to ratify an agreement with 
the EU. 

The law on the special status of Lugansk and Donetsk Regions guarantees the 
right to use and study Russian or any other language in Ukraine. 

It also states that local elections are to take place in the regions on 
December 7. 

The head of the self-proclaimed Lugansk People’s Republic, Igor Plotnitsky, 
earlier welcomed the law on special status for Ukraine’s eastern regions 
proposed by President Poroshenko. 

“The law on the special status of Donbass generally reflects the priorities we 
voiced at the September 1 negotiations. That’s why, even though a lot remains 
unclear, we may say that a peaceful solution has received its first chance of 
being implemented,” Plotnitsky told RIA Novosti. 

The PM of the self-proclaimed Donetsk People’s Republic Aleksandr Zakharchenko 
has reacted to the news of the law being passed by saying it should first be 
signed by President Poroshenko, RIA Novosti reports. 

“First let Poroshenko sign it, let it be published and come into force. Then 
we’ll translate it into Russian, read it and give an assessment,” Zakharchenko 
said. 

The law on ‘Prevention of prosecution and punishment of participants of events 
in the Donetsk and Lugansk Regions’ offers amnesty to those anti-government 
fighters who release all prisoners, hand in all weapons and vacate all occupied 
government buildings within a month following the law’s enactment. 

The laws have been part of a peace roadmap negotiated by Poroshenko and 
representatives of the self-proclaimed republics of Donetsk and Lugansk. The 
roadmap also included an agreement to a ceasefire, which came into force 
September 5. 

The truce has been barely holding with numerous reports on violations and both 
the troops and the anti-government fighters blaming each other for sporadic 
shootings. 

Another part of the peace plan – a prisoner exchange – has been gradually 
implemented

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