Pro-Putin Rebels Step Up Attacks in East Ukraine
Germany’s foreign minister expressed concerns that Russia is seeking to split up Ukraine by supporting separatists in the east and urged further dialogue with President Vladimir Putin’s government.
“I’m taking Russia at its word that it doesn’t want to destroy the unity of Ukraine,” Der Spiegel magazine cited the minister, Frank-Walter Steinmeier, as saying in an interview. “The reality, however, is speaking a different language.”
The conflict in the Luhansk and Donetsk regions of Ukraine along the Russian border has claimed more than 4,300 lives and laid much of the local infrastructure to waste. The European Union and the U.S. accuse Russia of not abiding by a September truce signed in Minsk, Belarus, and Ukraine says Russian troops and vehicles continue to cross the frontier. Russia denies it’s fomenting the war.
Steinmeier warned against breaking off lines of communication with Putin, who faced a barrage of criticism over Ukraine at the Group of 20 summit in Brisbane, Australia, a week ago and left the talks early. The war of words over Ukraine had become “dangerously swollen,” Spiegel cited the German minister as saying.
Putin defended Russia’s annexation of Ukraine’s Crimea peninsula earlier this year and its sympathy for the separatist cause in eastern Ukraine in an interview with Russia’s Tass news agency published today.
People in Luhansk “perceive themselves as parts of the greater Russian world,” Putin said. “As soon as we rise, some other nations immediately feel the urge to push Russia aside, to put it ‘where it belongs,’ to slow it down.”
Latest Fighting
Separatist forces continued attacks on Ukrainian government troops over the past 24 hours, military spokesman Volodymyr Polevyi told reporters in Kyiv today. Ukrainian artillery struck rebel positions 28 times, causing the separatists “serious losses,” he said. He gave no information about casualties among Ukrainian forces.
The city council in Donetsk said that a number of buildings were destroyed in overnight shelling, while parts of the city were without gas, power or water. More than 300 miners were temporarily trapped in the Zasyadko coal mine yesterday after shelling cut electricity supplies. The mine is close to Donetsk airport, where heavy fighting has been taking place between government forces and the separatists.
In another development, a train carrying debris from the Malaysia Airline System Bhd. (MAS) jetliner downed over a separatist-held area in July left for Kharkiv, a city under government control, this morning, Tass reported. The wreckage, packed into 12 rail cars, will be taken to the Netherlands, where it will be examined by air-safety officials.
The conflict has intensified since rebels in Donetsk and Luhansk held elections earlier this month. The self-proclaimed Donetsk People’s Republic announced today that Russia had sent tens of thousands of textbooks to the region for local schoolchildren.
To contact the reporters on this story: Tino Andresen in Dusseldorf at tandresen1@bloomberg.net; Aliaksandr Kudrytski in Minsk, Belarus at akudrytski@bloomberg.net
To contact the editors responsible for this story: James M. Gomez at jagomez@bloomberg.net; Balazs Penz at bpenz@bloomberg.net Eddie Buckle, Kevin Costelloe
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