Standoff ensues over Russian aid convoy for eastern Ukraine

As a standoff ensued between Russia and Ukraine over a massive aid convoy dispatched from Moscow, the United Nations on Wednesday sharply increased its estimate of the death toll from four months’ of fighting in eastern Ukraine.

A spokeswoman for the U.N. human rights office in Geneva said the number of dead from the Donetsk and Luhansk conflict zones had nearly doubled over the past two weeks as Ukrainian government forces close in on the pro-Russia separatists’ last strongholds.

Fighting has intensified and knocked out power, water and communications to much of the remaining separatist-held territory, leaving civilians who did not evacuate in dramatically deteriorating conditions.

Russia on Tuesday dispatched a 280-truck convoy said to be carrying food, water, medicine and generators for those trapped in Luhansk, with Kremlin leaders saying they had agreed on the details of transit and delivery with the Ukrainian government in Kyiv.

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But a key condition set by the Kyiv leadership was that the relief goods be transported through Ukrainian territory under escort by the International Committee of the Red Cross and in vehicles owned or leased by the Swiss-based aid agency.

Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko earlier had rejected the Kremlin’s attempt to send Russian aid to the region held by pro-Russia separatists but relented Monday when Russia agreed to an international relief mission under ICRC auspices and escort.