From the BBC:
“Ukraine conflict: Anger as
Zelensky agrees vote deal in east”
Nationalists accused the
president of capitulating to Russia, in a protest outside his office Hundreds of Ukrainians have protested after
President Volodymyr Zelensky said he had backed an agreement that would bring
elections to territory controlled by Russian-backed separatists. Mr Zelensky
came to power promising to end the five-year conflict in the east which has
left 13,000 people dead. Any vote would be under international standards and
would not be held "under the barrel of a gun", he said. Large parts
of Luhansk and Donetsk, in the Donbas region in eastern Ukraine, were seized by
Russian-backed separatists in 2014 after Russia captured and annexed Ukraine's
Crimea region. Conflict broke out as Ukraine's army tried to recapture
rebel-held areas and at least 40,000 people have been wounded. An estimated 1.5
million people have been internally displaced in the past five years. Violence
is now at a lower level but 15 people have been killed this year and Ukrainian
military officials say separatists violated an existing ceasefire 13 times on
Tuesday by firing on army positions.
What has Ukraine agreed?
The proposed vote is part of a
plan known as the "Steinmeier formula" to bring special status in the
separatist-held east. It aimed to break the impasse over a 2015 peace deal
between Ukraine and the Russian-backed separatists and decide who should do
what and in what order. Mr Zelensky promised the planned elections would not be
held "under the barrel of a gun" Proposed in 2016 by Germany's then-foreign
minister, Frank-Walter Steinmeier, the plan details free and fair elections in
the east under Ukrainian law, verification by the OSCE international security
organisation, and then self-governing status in return. Mr Zelensky told a news
conference that the elections would be held under Ukraine's constitution, and
only when no "troops" remained in the separatist areas. This has been
taken to mean Russian troops, although Russia denies that its soldiers are
present in the east. President Zelensky made bringing peace to eastern Ukraine
his number one election promise. And he's certainly trying. Last month there was a significant prisoner
swap with Russia and now the former comedian has publicly agreed to the
Steinmeier formula. That should pave the way for talks with Russia, Germany and
France in what's known as the Normandy Format. Freed Ukrainians met their families in
September after months of separation The most sensitive aspect of the
Steinmeier formula is that it allows local elections to take place in the
occupied parts of Ukraine before Russian-backed forces have withdrawn, and Kiev
has control of the border. Though
elections in Donetsk and Luhansk would be monitored by observers from the OSCE
and would in theory be under Ukrainian law, it's hard to see how they would be
fairly contested. Most people with
strongly pro-Ukrainian views have long ago left the occupied areas for their
own safety. So it seems almost inevitable that the elections would consolidate
the position of the Russia-aligned leaders who are currently in place, granting
them the recognition Moscow has long craved. With Ukraine having allowed the election to go
ahead, and then granting the region's special status, it would then be up to
Russia to honour its part of the deal, withdraw its weapons and hand over
control of the Ukrainian side of the common border. It's not hard to see why President Zelensky's
critics see this as a major concession, if not a capitulation.
What reaction has there been?
Russia has backed the Ukrainian
move and Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said he expected a summit to take
place soon. Mr Zelensky's predecessor as president, Petro Poroshenko, was
damning of the deal, referring to it as "Putin's formula", while
ex-Foreign Minister Pavlo Klimkin was dubious about the chances of free and
fair elections. "Society will be demanding answers, and these answers
should not be solving the issue of Donbas occupation at Ukraine's
expense," he said. One former Ukrainian negotiator warned it was a
"path to war, not to peace", while rock singer Svyatoslav Vakarchuk,
who leads the Voice party in Ukraine, called on the president to explain the
concessions he was ready to make.
^ I’m not sure if holding
elections in Donbass while the fighting is still on-going and the Russians
continue to send both troops and supplies there is a very good idea. It seems
like the kind of thing you do after the fighting officially ends. ^
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.