5
reportedly killed in shootout at guard checkpoint in E.Ukraine
Kiev pledges not to attack separatists as Russia defends troop deployments
Ukraine
promises to suspend 'active phase of anti-terrorist operation' as
Kremlin defends buildup of troops at border
18
April, 2014
The
Ukrainian government pledged on Saturday not to attack separatists in
the eastern part of the country over Easter as the Russian government
justified the buildup of its forces at the border.
The
Ukrainian foreign ministry promised "the suspension of the
active phase of the anti-terrorist operation" among a list of
government initiatives to defuse the crisis. A spokeswoman for the
SBU state security service said on Saturday the suspension was
"linked to the implementation of the Geneva agreement and the
Easter holidays".
In
Moscow Dmitry Peskov, spokesman for the Russian president, Vladimir
Putin, said that an increase in troop levels near the border was
caused by concern over instability in Ukraine.
"We
… have forces in the region of the Ukrainian border. Some of these
forces are based there permanently, others are there to reinforce,
against the backdrop of what is happening in Ukraine itself," he
told Rossiya 1 television.
"Forgive
me but, [Ukraine] is a country where there has just been a military
coup, so naturally any country is going to take particular
precautionary measures in terms of ensuring its security."
He
said as a sovereign state, Russia was free to deploy troops anywhere
on its territory without restrictions. He denied allegations that the
Russian military was interfering in events inside Ukraine. Peskov
said such assertions were "completely wrong". Previously
the Kremlin said its forces were on routine exercises. Meanwhile,
Russia's foreign ministry said it would offer strong assistance to
Ukraine to overcome its crisis, but emphasised that the ultimate
responsibility for reducing tensions lies with Ukrainians, not
outsiders.
The
statement came two days after senior diplomats from Ukraine, Russia,
the US and the European Union issued a statement calling for an array
of actions to defuse tension, including the disarming of militant
groups and the freeing of public buildings occupied by separatists.
Moscow
said that the deputy foreign minister, Grigory Karasin, met Oleg
Tsaryov, a pro-Russia candidate in the Ukrainian presidential
election scheduled for 25 May.
"The
Russian side noted that the questions of resolving the internal
political crisis should be decided by Ukrainians themselves in close
co-operation with a special monitoring mission" of the
Organisation for Security and Co-operation in Europe, said a
statement. "Russia is prepared to show the most wide support in
this."
The
news came as an opinion poll conducted in south-east Ukraine showed a
large majority did not want to be ruled by Moscow but also considered
the Kiev government as illegitimate.
Among
the 3,200 respondents across Ukraine's entire mostly Russian-speaking
south-east, the number of those opposed to Moscow taking control was
69.7%, according to the poll from Kiev's Institute for International
Sociology published in the Russian-language Weekly Mirror newspaper
on Saturday.
In
the Donetsk region, where separatists have declared an independent
republic and demanded a referendum on autonomy, 38.4% said they
backed Kremlin demands to federalise Ukraine with 41% wanting some
decentralisation of power.
Around
74% of respondents said they view the acting president, Oleksandr
Turchynov, to be illegitimate, the poll said
Unbearable Bears: Media's clichéd portrayal of Russia
This
year Russia is once again gracing the world's glossiest covers.
Featuring everything from bears, to red stars the magazine's are
filling their pages with stereotypical images. RT's Gayane Chichakyan
looks at the trend.
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