Ukraine
rules out direct talks with separatists
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[November 19, 2014]
By Natalia Zinets and Gabriela Baczynska
KIEV/MOSCOW (Reuters) - Russia urged
Ukraine's leaders on Wednesday to talk directly to separatists to end
the conflict in the east, but Kiev rejected the call and told Moscow to
stop "playing games" aimed at legitimizing "terrorists".
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Kiev and the West accuse Russia of destabilizing Ukraine by
providing the rebels with money, arms and reinforcements. The West
has imposed sanctions on Moscow over the conflict in which more than
4,000 people have been killed since mid-April.
Russia backs the separatists but denies it is directly involved in
the conflict in the Donbass region.
"We are calling for the establishment of stable contacts between
Kiev and Donbass representatives with the aim of reaching mutually
acceptable agreements," Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said
in a policy address to the lower house of parliament in Moscow.
But Ukrainian Prime Minister Arseny Yatseniuk hit back, accusing
Moscow of trying to push Ukraine into recognizing the pro-Russian
rebels who are fighting government troops to split parts of the
eastern Donetsk and Luhansk regions from Kiev.
Speaking at a government meeting, he declared Kiev would not speak
directly to the separatists and repeated the phrase slowly in
Russian for emphasis, saying: "We will not hold direct talks with
your mercenaries."
A ceasefire was agreed on Sept. 5 in the Belarussian capital of
Minsk as part of a wider deal between Moscow, Kiev and the rebels
under the auspices of the Organization for Security and Cooperation
in Europe (OSCE) - with a former president representing Kiev to
avoid formal recognition of the rebels.
But the truce is under constant pressure, with deaths of government
troops and civilians reported daily. Kiev and the West accuse Russia
of sending tanks and troops to back the rebels but Moscow denies the
charges.
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Lavrov and president Vladimir Putin held talks with German Foreign
Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier in Moscow on Tuesday but failed to
overcome deep rifts over Ukraine.
Yatseniuk called on Moscow to "stop playing games aimed at
legitimizing bandits and terrorists."
"If you (Russia) want peace - fulfill the Minsk agreement," he said.
Lavrov said in Moscow that the "party of war" - supporters of Kiev's
military campaign against the rebels - had tried to exclude the
separatists from peace moves and to "force the West to seek the
consent of Russia to act as a side in the conflict."
"This is a completely counter-productive and provocative line that
has no chance of succeeding," Lavrov said.
(Writing by Richard Balmforth, Editing by Timothy Heritage)
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