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Ukraine, pro-Russian rebels resume peace talks

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Ukranian and rebel envoys prepared for intense talks on Wednesday aimed at ending a pro-Russian uprising that has left the ex-Soviet republic in ruins and upset East-West ties.

A successful round of preliminary negotiations in the Belarussian capital Minsk could pave the way for a second meeting on Friday at which a final agreement is signed.

But sharply contrasting visions of Ukraine's place in Europe and its system of government as a whole, threaten to block a solution to the eight-month crisis.

Pro-Russian militias rose up in the industrial east after Kiev's historic shift towards Europe last winter, and the subsequent ouster of an unpopular Moscow-backed president.

Separatist commanders in Lugansk and Donetsk since have declared their own republics and will settle for no less than Ukraine becoming a loose federation in which they manage most of their own affairs.

A man walks past a damaged building in the eastern Ukrainian city of Shakhtarsk on December 21  2014
A man walks past a damaged building in the eastern Ukrainian city of Shakhtarsk on December 21, 2014
Vasily Maximov, AFP/File

This solution is backed firmly by Russia but rejected by Ukrainian nationalists who make up an important part of President Petro Poroshenko's government.

Ukraine has remained tightly centralised since independence and is only now considering easing its hold over the country's regions in order to stem public resentment over the relative prosperity enjoyed in the capital, Kiev.

Such problems helped undermine two deals reached in Minsk in September that Poroshenko was forced into following a rebel surge in the summer backed, according to NATO, by crack Russian forces and tanks.

Russian President Vladimir Putin has denied involvement, calling soldiers who crossed the border war zone volunteers.

A UN count puts the number of deaths following an initial September 5 truce deal at more than 1,300.

The overall toll since last winter from Europe's bloodiest conflict since the 1990s is more than 4,700 and has caused friction between many of the country's Ukrainian and Russian speakers that may take generations to heal.

- Money at stake -

The Minsk meeting is due to begin at 1200 GMT and include mediators from Russia and the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE).

The most important immediate issue for the rebels will be to make sure that Kiev resumes the social payments it suspended in November in fear they were being used to fund the revolt.

Ukrainian Prime Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk (R) gestures as he speaks with Ukrainian Finance Minister...
Ukrainian Prime Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk (R) gestures as he speaks with Ukrainian Finance Minister Natalia Jaresko during a parliament session in Kiev on December 23, 2014
Genya Savilov, AFP

Russia's Kiev ambassador Mikhail Zurabov -- Moscow's envoy at the talks who defends the insurgents' stance -- said "economic" issues were one of the four main points on the agenda.

But a Kiev-based OSCE representative who will also attend Wednesday's meeting said the sides will discuss humanitarian aid deliveries, but steer clear of the payments debate.

The OSCE's Heidi Tagliavini added that also up for debate were the details of a mutual troop withdrawal and a prisoner swap.

Separatist negotiators sounded pessimistic about the initial talks' outcome as they headed to Minsk on Tuesday night.

"So far, I see no grounds to believe we will reach any consensus," Lugansk rebel leader Igor Plotnitsky said.

"I feel like we are still going around in circles. I really do not think we will achieve any specific result."

- Ukraine looks to NATO -

Adding to the tensions was the Ukrainian parliament's decision on Tuesday to drop the neutrality it adopted in 2010 under Russian pressure.

A protester argues with police in front of Ukrainian Parliament in Kiev on December 23  2014 as lawm...
A protester argues with police in front of Ukrainian Parliament in Kiev on December 23, 2014 as lawmakers adopt a bill dropping Ukraine's non-aligned status
Genya Savilov, AFP

The decision was in line with Poroshenko's vow to put Ukraine under Western military protection in the face of Russian threats.

Ukraine sought NATO membership in the early post-Soviet era but, with its once-mighty army in ruins and riven by corruption, it was never viewed as a serious candidate.

The February change of regime in Kiev upset Putin's plans to get Ukraine to sign into a new bloc that Moscow hopes will counterbalance NATO and the European Union.

Moscow also has set Kiev's exclusion from all military unions as a condition for any Minsk deal.

Russian Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev warned on the eve of Tuesday's parliamentary vote that "in essence, an application for NATO membership will turn Ukraine into a potential military opponent for Russia."

Ukranian and rebel envoys prepared for intense talks on Wednesday aimed at ending a pro-Russian uprising that has left the ex-Soviet republic in ruins and upset East-West ties.

A successful round of preliminary negotiations in the Belarussian capital Minsk could pave the way for a second meeting on Friday at which a final agreement is signed.

But sharply contrasting visions of Ukraine’s place in Europe and its system of government as a whole, threaten to block a solution to the eight-month crisis.

Pro-Russian militias rose up in the industrial east after Kiev’s historic shift towards Europe last winter, and the subsequent ouster of an unpopular Moscow-backed president.

Separatist commanders in Lugansk and Donetsk since have declared their own republics and will settle for no less than Ukraine becoming a loose federation in which they manage most of their own affairs.

A man walks past a damaged building in the eastern Ukrainian city of Shakhtarsk on December 21  2014

A man walks past a damaged building in the eastern Ukrainian city of Shakhtarsk on December 21, 2014
Vasily Maximov, AFP/File

This solution is backed firmly by Russia but rejected by Ukrainian nationalists who make up an important part of President Petro Poroshenko’s government.

Ukraine has remained tightly centralised since independence and is only now considering easing its hold over the country’s regions in order to stem public resentment over the relative prosperity enjoyed in the capital, Kiev.

Such problems helped undermine two deals reached in Minsk in September that Poroshenko was forced into following a rebel surge in the summer backed, according to NATO, by crack Russian forces and tanks.

Russian President Vladimir Putin has denied involvement, calling soldiers who crossed the border war zone volunteers.

A UN count puts the number of deaths following an initial September 5 truce deal at more than 1,300.

The overall toll since last winter from Europe’s bloodiest conflict since the 1990s is more than 4,700 and has caused friction between many of the country’s Ukrainian and Russian speakers that may take generations to heal.

– Money at stake –

The Minsk meeting is due to begin at 1200 GMT and include mediators from Russia and the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE).

The most important immediate issue for the rebels will be to make sure that Kiev resumes the social payments it suspended in November in fear they were being used to fund the revolt.

Ukrainian Prime Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk (R) gestures as he speaks with Ukrainian Finance Minister...

Ukrainian Prime Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk (R) gestures as he speaks with Ukrainian Finance Minister Natalia Jaresko during a parliament session in Kiev on December 23, 2014
Genya Savilov, AFP

Russia’s Kiev ambassador Mikhail Zurabov — Moscow’s envoy at the talks who defends the insurgents’ stance — said “economic” issues were one of the four main points on the agenda.

But a Kiev-based OSCE representative who will also attend Wednesday’s meeting said the sides will discuss humanitarian aid deliveries, but steer clear of the payments debate.

The OSCE’s Heidi Tagliavini added that also up for debate were the details of a mutual troop withdrawal and a prisoner swap.

Separatist negotiators sounded pessimistic about the initial talks’ outcome as they headed to Minsk on Tuesday night.

“So far, I see no grounds to believe we will reach any consensus,” Lugansk rebel leader Igor Plotnitsky said.

“I feel like we are still going around in circles. I really do not think we will achieve any specific result.”

– Ukraine looks to NATO –

Adding to the tensions was the Ukrainian parliament’s decision on Tuesday to drop the neutrality it adopted in 2010 under Russian pressure.

A protester argues with police in front of Ukrainian Parliament in Kiev on December 23  2014 as lawm...

A protester argues with police in front of Ukrainian Parliament in Kiev on December 23, 2014 as lawmakers adopt a bill dropping Ukraine's non-aligned status
Genya Savilov, AFP

The decision was in line with Poroshenko’s vow to put Ukraine under Western military protection in the face of Russian threats.

Ukraine sought NATO membership in the early post-Soviet era but, with its once-mighty army in ruins and riven by corruption, it was never viewed as a serious candidate.

The February change of regime in Kiev upset Putin’s plans to get Ukraine to sign into a new bloc that Moscow hopes will counterbalance NATO and the European Union.

Moscow also has set Kiev’s exclusion from all military unions as a condition for any Minsk deal.

Russian Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev warned on the eve of Tuesday’s parliamentary vote that “in essence, an application for NATO membership will turn Ukraine into a potential military opponent for Russia.”

AFP
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With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

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