Sunday, October 5, 2014

In Name Only

From Yahoo:
"One month in, Ukraine truce exists in name only"

Ukrainian forces and pro-Russian rebels marked a month since the signing of a Kremlin-backed truce on Sunday by engaging in one of the most heated battles of their six-month war over the ex-Soviet state's eastern rustbelt. The artillery blasts that rocked the frontline city of Donetsk were yet another blow to the 12-point peace agreement signed on September 5, and which is officially still in force.
"There is no ceasefire. You hear?" 31-year-old resident Yekaterina Manannikova said, pointing in the direction of Donetsk airport, once a glittering showcase for the biggest city in the east, now the battered scene of a non-stop firefight. "Peace is already declared, how many times should it be declared to be effective? Two, three times?" said another local, Vitaliy Chura, 29, blaming the separatists for the continued fighting.  The agreement -- aimed at ending almost six months of war that has claimed over 3,300 lives -- included a promise to create a 30-kilometre (20-mile) buffer zone between the two forces.  But Ukraine's military says Kiev will not start pulling back forces until rebels stop firing on its positions, including at the airport.  On Sunday, military spokesman Volodymyr Polyovy said rebels had launched two more airport attacks "with support of tanks" over the past 24 hours, but were repelled. Two soldiers and at least three civilians died, putting the death toll since the ceasefire at 80, excluding rebel losses. Despite the continuing carnage, both sides have stopped short of declaring the truce dead. Russian and Ukrainian soldiers have even created a monitoring contact group together with the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) to patrol the frontline.  France and Germany will also send drones "in the coming days" to monitor the ceasefire, French Defence Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian said on Sunday. Analysts say it is in all the major parties' interests to maintain the fiction that the ceasefire is holding.  Ukraine President Petro Poroshenko wants to give an impression of peace ahead of snap parliamentary polls on October 26, and is keen to see as many eastern cities participate as possible. "Society wants to see an end to the war. Politicians are trying to respond to these demands, and will keep talking about the truce even if, de-facto, it doesn't exist," said political analyst Taras Berezovets. Moscow would not be eager to pronounce the ceasefire dead either, he added, saying that "for Russia, it pays to keep destabilising the situation in Ukraine". European Union countries also prefer to cling on to a poorly working truce rather than deepen its standoff with Russia -- its leading source of gas -- as winter approaches. The French defence minister said the truce was holding everywhere "but Donetsk".  "We are in the process of reflecting with the Germans on how we can both reinforce the monitoring of the ceasefire in the buffer zone," Le Drian told French radio. Meanwhile, the Red Cross announced it was suspending operations in eastern Ukraine following the death of a Swiss staffer on Thursday in Donetsk.
 

^ It's sad that the EU is living in denial (as usual) and would rather not see what is actually happening for the belief that things are great. As usual it seems the Europeans want to live in a bubble than in reality. Russia knows exactly want is going on since I'm sure they are still supplying men and weapons to the ethnic Russian terrorists in eastern Ukraine. ^




 http://news.yahoo.com/one-month-ukraine-truce-exists-name-only-102432906.html

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