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Separatists dismiss Ukraine ceasefire

By , , on June 22, 2014


Portrait of Donetsk activist, ukrainian, near a barricade in front of the regional administration building opposes Kiev junta on april 11, 2014 in Donetsk. Denis Kornilov / Shutterstock
Portrait of Donetsk activist, ukrainian, near a barricade in front of the regional administration building opposes Kiev junta on april 11, 2014 in Donetsk. Denis Kornilov / Shutterstock

DONETSK, Ukraine — Pro-Russian separatists in Ukraine’s embattled east have dismissed a unilateral cease-fire ordered by President Petro Poroshenko as fake, while nine Ukrainian service members were wounded in clashes just before and after the cease-fire began.

Otherwise, no large-scale fighting had been reported Saturday, the first full day of what is to be a six-and-a-half-day stand-down by the Ukrainian military.

Poroshenko ordered the cease-fire starting at 10 p.m. Friday as a first step in a peace plan he hopes will end a conflict that has left hundreds of people dead and weighed heavily on the country’s economy.

The plan includes an amnesty for fighters who lay down their arms, and a chance for them to leave the country. That is to be followed by local and parliamentary elections and a jobs program. The Kremlin – which had consistently demanded that Kiev be the first to cease fire – dismissed the plan, saying it sounded like an ultimatum and lacked any firm offer to open talks with insurgents.

Separatist leaders have rejected the cease-fire and said they will not disarm. In Donetsk, a group of armed men gathered in the central square to take a military oath to the self-proclaimed Donetsk People’s Republic.

Pavel Gubarev, who describes himself as the governor of the Donetsk People’s Republic, claimed there was no cease-fire near Slovyansk, scene of serious clashes over the past several months.

“There is no cease-fire over there,” Gubarev said. “There is shooting all the time, and this cease-fire that Poroshenko is talking about is just fake. The Ukrainian forces are either not under his control, or he is just a liar.”

Speaking to Russian reporters in Saudi Arabia, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov lambasted Poroshenko’s peace plan as “lacking the most important thing: an offer to start a dialog.”

Poroshenko has always ruled out negotiations with those “who have blood on their hands.”

Lavrov also said that Moscow is concerned about what it described as a “build-up of military activity” in Ukraine, RIA Novosti reported.

EU Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso lauded Poroshenko’s peace plan and urged “all parties” to “actively promote its implementation.”

The Ukrainian Border Guard Service reported overnight attacks on two border posts in the Donetsk region, which left three troops injured, hours after the cease-fire was announced. One of the posts, Vyselky, was attacked with mortar and sniper fire for half an hour, the border guards said.

An attack on another border post, Izvaryne, immediately before the cease-fire left six men injured, the Border Guard Service said.

Ukraine’s Defense Ministry reported two attacks on the quarters of a missile unit in the village of Avdiyivka. Kiev said men armed with automatic rifles and grenade launchers attacked the base at 11 p.m. – one hour after the cease-fire was announced – prompting the army to respond. The rebels left in the morning, the defense ministry said.

The U.N. says 356 people have died in violence in Ukraine since May 7, and 34,000 have left their homes. The U.N. count did not include several recent clashes and fighting before May 7.

In Russia, President Vladimir Putin on Saturday ordered military forces in central Russia on combat alert as well as an exercise for airborne troops. The combat alert in the central military district, which encompasses the Volga region and the Ural mountains but not western Russia, will last until next Saturday and will involve 65,000 troops, Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu said.

NATO spokeswoman Oana Lungescu on Saturday lamented Moscow’s military exercises, saying that “it can be seen as a further escalation of the crisis with Ukraine.”

McHugh reported from Kiev. Nataliya Vasilyeva in Moscow and John-Thor Dahlburg in Brussels contributed this report.

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