Ukrainian military and rebels accuse each other over deaths

Both sides allege violations of Minsk peace deal after soldier and aid envoy killed

Armoured military vehicles being prepared for a parade by pro-Russian separatists in Donetsk, Ukraine. Both Kiev and the rebels have accused each other of breaking the Minsk peace deal through recent attacks. Photograph: Alexander Ermochenko/EPA
Armoured military vehicles being prepared for a parade by pro-Russian separatists in Donetsk, Ukraine. Both Kiev and the rebels have accused each other of breaking the Minsk peace deal through recent attacks. Photograph: Alexander Ermochenko/EPA

The Ukrainian military and pro-Russian separatists in eastern Ukraine have traded accusations, reviving concerns that a peace deal signed in Minsk in February may collapse, although international monitors said the violations were still relatively limited.

One Ukrainian serviceman was killed and two were wounded when separatists shelled Ukraine’s National Guard on Saturday at Shyrokyne, a village east of the port of Mariupol on the Sea of Azov, Kiev’s military said.

“Today . . . the adversary used 122mm artillery. They are banned under the Minsk agreements,” military spokesman Dmytro Gorbunov told the television channel 112.

The commander of the battalion that came under fire was separately quoted as saying the serviceman had been killed when a medical vehicle taking him to hospital was fired on.

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Rebel leaders in eastern Ukraine responded to military claims with further accusations. “Today a rather explosive situation has formed, which demands the urgent intervention of the international community,” rebel spokesman Eduard Basurin said, according to the Donetsk news agency.

Mr Basurin said Ukrainian forces had fired on an aid convoy from Russia, killing one person. He later accused them of increasingly frequent attacks and indiscriminate fire on populated areas.

Gleb Kornilov, head of the Foundation for Aid to Novorossiya, a Russian aid organisation, told reporters that an aid column had come under fire from Ukrainian troops near Shyrokyne on Thursday when it accidentally strayed from an agreed route, and that a Russian citizen had been killed.

“The convoy didn’t try to hide,” Mr Kornilov said. “It was in broad daylight, with flashing lights, with our stickers on all sides. All the same, they opened fire.”

Ceasefire monitors

The Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE), which is monitoring the ceasefire, said the violations were still limited.

"We are not in a phase of very active conflict, like we have seen in previous months," OSCE secretary-general Lamberto Zannier told reporters on the sidelines of a security conference in Estonia.

“I agree that if we don’t take these things under control there is a risk of a larger deterioration, so we have our teams heading back or already back in that area to engage with the commanders.”

Another rebel representative, Denis Pushilin, said a fresh build-up of military hardware by Kiev showed that it was intent on a “military solution of the conflict”, according to the Russian news agency RIA.

Mr Pushilin said the rebels were not opposed to the deployment of international peacekeepers in eastern Ukraine - a long-standing demand by Kiev - but accused the Ukraine government of violating the Minsk deal by failing to discuss constitutional changes with the rebels.

Attending military exercises in southwestern Ukraine, President Petro Poroshenko said: "Ukraine is strictly implementing the Minsk agreements, therefore the Ukrainian armed forces will never attack first."

Large quantities of heavy weapons have been withdrawn by both sides under the Minsk deal, brokered by the leaders of Ukraine, Russia, Germany and France.

Both sides regularly accuse each other of violating the accord.

The Kiev military says rebels are keeping up pressure on Mariupol, which is strategically important due to its position between rebel-controlled eastern regions and the Crimean Peninsula, which was annexed by Russia in March 2014.

More than 6,100 people have been killed in the conflict, which erupted in the Russian-speaking east of the country after Russia seized Crimea following the overthrow of a Moscow-backed president in Kiev.

Reuters