Ukraine urges West to get ‘tough’ on Russia after rebels storm town

Agence France-Presse

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Ukraine urges West to get ‘tough’ on Russia after rebels storm town

EPA

As EU and UN officials express concern at the violence in the town of Debaltseve, Russian President Vladimir Putin urges Kiev to permit its beleaguered soldiers to surrender

SOLEDAR/KIEV, Ukraine – Ukraine on Tuesday, February 17, appealed to the West to get “tough” on Russia after separatists it says are militarily backed by Moscow stormed a flashpoint town to attack thousands of troops in violation of a three-day-old ceasefire.

As EU and UN officials expressed concern at the violence in the town of Debaltseve, Russian President Vladimir Putin – who denies having a hand in Ukraine’s insurgency – urged Kiev to permit its beleaguered soldiers to surrender.

“I hope that the Ukrainian authorities are not going to prevent the Ukrainian soldiers from laying down their weapons,” Putin said in a press conference during a visit to Budapest.

He also said the 10-month Ukrainian conflict, which has so far killed more than 5,600 people, could not be solved by “military means”.

Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko, in a phone conversation with German Chancellor Angela Merkel, said the assault on Debaltseve, a strategic rail hub in the country’s east, was a “cynical attack” on the truce brokered last week by Germany and France.

He called for the European Union and international community to take a “tough reaction against the treacherous actions of the rebels and Russia”.

The comments came just ahead of a UN Security Council meeting that adopted a Russian-sponsored resolution calling for an immediate end to hostilities in Ukraine and compliance with the ceasefire.

Rebels claim control of town

Intense shelling was heard in the Debaltseve area Tuesday, Agence France-Presse journalists reported from the neighboring town of Soledar. 

Ukrainian officials admitted that the pro-Russian rebels attacking Debaltseve had taken parts of the town and surrounded some of the army units there, but said fierce fighting was continuing.

“The hopes of the world for peace are being destroyed,” the deputy head of Ukraine’s presidential administration, Valeriy Chaly, said.

Rebels claimed to control 80% of Debaltseve and to have killed “many” of the 8,000 soldiers they have said were holed up in the surrounded town, and taken scores others prisoner.

An estimated 5,000 civilians were also cowering in cellars, with little water or food.

It was not known how many casualties the street-to-street combat by fighters armed with automatic weapons and grenade launchers had caused. Journalists and observers from the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) have been stopped by rebels from entering the town.

The insurgents had waged an intense bombardment of the town last Saturday, February 14, the day before the ceasefire came into effect, and kept up rocket and mortar fire afterwards.

That violence, and other breaches of the truce both sides blamed on the other, prevented the warring forces from pulling back heavy weapons from the frontline in Ukraine’s east as was meant to happen from Tuesday.

The pro-Russian rebels have since argued that Debaltseve was well inside their territory and so should not be included in the ceasefire agreement.

But Ukraine described it as a finger of territory it controlled and therefore subject to the truce.

Russia denies involvement

Ukraine and the West accuse Russia of deploying troops and tanks to support the separatists. Moscow denies that and describes the Russian fighters seen in Ukraine as “volunteers”.

Russia has been hit by several rounds of Western sanctions over its perceived role in the conflict.

US President Barack Obama has said arming Ukraine against the rebels was one option he could consider if things got worse. But he said he preferred imposing “costs” on Putin to get him to stop Russian involvement.

The violence in Debaltseve has unsettled world powers and agencies. The US expressed “serious concern” while a UN official in Geneva, Rupert Colville, said: “We are alarmed.”

EU foreign policy chief Federica Mogherini said that “we knew from the beginning that it (the truce) was going to be difficult, fragile,” but the Russians and separatists know that “it’s all the international community looking for the implementation of these agreements”. – Rappler.com

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