CNN Poll: 56% of Ukrainians are Pro-EU |
The roundtable talks
scheduled to start Wednesday come only 11 days ahead of the elections --
and at a time when the uneasy standoff between Ukrainian security
forces and militants seems increasingly volatile.
World leaders have backed the national dialogue, intended to help ease the crisis roiling Ukraine's eastern region.
But it's not yet clear
what it can achieve if the pro-Russian activists who control a swath of
territory and staged a weekend referendum on independence are not on
board.
Ukraine's government
insists it does not negotiate with people it views as terrorists, while
the separatists say they will not hold talks with an occupying force.
They view the interim government as illegitimate because it took power
after pro-Moscow President Viktor Yanukovych was ousted in February.
The roundtable talks will
be mediated by a German diplomat, Walter Ischinger, and are supported
by the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe, which has
deployed monitors in Ukraine ahead of presidential elections due on May
25.
U.S. Secretary of State
John Kerry described the discussions, expected to focus on
decentralization and constitutional reform, as a "key step in the path
to heal the tensions politically."
The United States "very strongly supports this process," he said Tuesday in Washington.
Kerry also welcomed the
decision by EU member states this week to impose additional sanctions on
13 #Russian and Ukrainian individuals and two Crimean companies, in
connection with the Ukraine crisis.
And he said Russia "really does face a choice" over its actions in Ukraine.
"The choice is to allow
the people of Ukraine to determine their own future without interference
from outside and with efforts by all of us to try to assist in
de-escalating the tension, removing people from buildings, pulling back
security forces, counterterrorism initiatives -- all of those things --
in order to give the people of Ukraine the ability to breathe through
the democratic process."
Annexation call
Donetsk separatist
leader Denis Pushilin said Monday that the Donetsk region was not only
independent following the referendum, but would ask to join the Russian
Federation.
Pushilin's announcement
was reminiscent of separatists' moves in the Black Sea peninsula of
Crimea, which Russia annexed after Crimeans voted to secede from Ukraine
and join Russia in a March 16 referendum.
Since then, simmering
tensions in eastern Ukraine have increasingly erupted into bloody
clashes between Ukrainian security forces and armed separatists,
prompting fears of a wider descent into violence.
Kiev has accused Russia
of supporting and coordinating the separatists, but Moscow denies having
direct influence over them. The activists went ahead with the
referendum despite a call from Russian President Vladimir Putin to delay
it.
In a sign of the
escalating tensions, six members of the Ukrainian armed forces were
killed Tuesday in a "terrorist attack" in the Donetsk region, the
Ukrainian Defense Ministry said.
The deadly incident
occurred in the village of Oktyabrski in the Slovyansk area, about 20
kilometers (12 miles) from Kramatorsk, during "a unit movement from the
military base" the Defense Ministry said on its website Tuesday.
Slovyansk and Kramatorsk have become strongholds for pro-Russian separatist groups in recent weeks.
"Our soldiers were
attacked in an ambush. Terrorists attacked our land troops with
grenades. The attackers were more than 30 people and set an ambush near
the river," the ministry said.
"After a long shootout, six soldiers of the Ukrainian Armed Services were killed," the statement said.
Hours earlier, the
spokesman for a separatist leader in Luhansk said the self-declared
"people's governor" of Luhansk had been injured when his car was shot at
by unknown attackers.
Election monitors return
A European diplomatic
source told CNN that election monitors from the Organization for
Security and Cooperation in Europe had returned to Donetsk and Luhansk
on Tuesday.
They were pulled out
just before the referendum because of security fears and a general
deterioration in the situation, the source said, adding that their
temporary withdrawal was a "bad omen" this close to an election.
For an election to
happen, you need security and accessibility, the source said, but the
Ukrainian authorities' "anti-terrorist" operation against pro-Russian
separatists is ongoing.
While the Ukrainian
military is in a "very poor" state, the anti-government forces are seen
to have assault rifles, rocket-propelled grenade launchers and
surface-to-air missile launchers. Their origin is unknown, but the
equipment is "not something you find at a local hardware store," the
source added.
Bank warns of wider risks
The European Bank for
Reconstruction and Development warned Wednesday that the crisis in
Ukraine was having a "severe impact" on the economies of Ukraine and
Russia.
It also threatens to
slow down the recovery in the wider region, or even bring it to a
complete halt, said the bank, which invests in 34 countries in Europe,
Central Asia and the Mediterranean region.
According to the bank's
most likely scenario, Ukraine will slump into recession this year, while
Russia's economy -- which has already been hit by a loss of investor
confidence and capital flight -- will stagnate and show only limited
growth next year.
A more negative scenario
would see Russia slip into recession, Ukraine's situation worsen and
the whole region grind to a halt in terms of growth, the bank said in a
news release.
"At this point, the Russia-Ukraine crisis would start impacting the global economy," its report said.
Source: CNN News
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