Merkel blasts Russia over Ukraine crisis


(MENAFN- The Peninsula)  Ukraine yesterday reported the death of eight more civilians and two soldiers in fighting with pro-Russian insurgents as German Chancellor Angela Merkel accused the Kremlin of interfering in Kiev's pro-European drive.

The latest casualties across the Russian-speaking Donetsk and Lugansk regions came two days ahead of the planned start of a ceasefire aimed at winding down one of Europe's deadliest conflicts in decades.

The United Nations believes the eight-month uprising in eastern Ukraine has killed more than 4,300 people and driven nearly a million more from their homes.

It has also paralysed much of Ukraine's industry and left the nation of 45 million dependent on tens of billions of dollars in emergency global aid.

The diplomatic fallout from the violence threatens to be equally damaging and lasting.

Charges of Kremlin backing for the insurgents have eroded much of the trust built between Moscow and the West in the post-Cold War era and left Russian President Vladimir Putin more isolated than ever in his dominant 15-year rule.

The West fears that the Russian strongman is trying to create a "frozen conflict" that keeps the Ukrainian leadership off-balance and continually dependent on Moscow.

Russia's violation of "the territorial integrity and sovereignty of Ukraine must not be allowed to stand," Merkel told German newspaper Die Welt.

Merkel added that "Russia had created difficulties" for both Ukraine and its fellow Soviet republics of Moldova and Georgia after they had made "their own sovereign decisions" to sign trade agreements with the EU.

The pro-Russian revolt erupted weeks after the February ouster in Kiev of a Kremlin-backed president who had ditched a landmark EU pact that would have paved the way to Ukraine's membership in the 28-nation bloc.

The Kremlin flatly denies the charges and accuses Washington of orchestrating last winter's pro-European protests in Kiev and across more nationalistic parts of western Ukraine.

Putin this week said Ukraine will eventually regret the episode and realise the mistake it made when it finally ratified the EU deal three months ago.

A dramatic recent upsurge in violence that some Ukranian officials and media believe killed hundreds of fighters - and possibly Russian special forces covertly operating in the east - have pushed all sides towards agreeing a new truce.

Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko has proclaimed tomorrow to be a "day of silence" in the war zone and the rebel command has since pledged to respect it.

The two foes hope to iron out the final details of what is meant to be a brand new truce agreement tomorrow in the Belarussian capital Minsk.


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