BFF-52 Berlin talks aim to revive stalled Ukraine peace process

236

ZCZC

BFF-52

UKRAINE-RUSSIA-CONFLICT-DIPLOMACY-GERMANY-FRANCE

Berlin talks aim to revive stalled Ukraine peace process

BERLIN, June 11, 2018 (BSS/AFP) – Ukraine and Russia’s foreign ministers
meet their German and French counterparts on Monday in a renewed bid to
resolve the smouldering civil war in eastern Ukraine as Moscow seeks to end
Western sanctions.

The Ukraine conflict, half-forgotten by the West amid other crises and its
own divisions, has claimed over 10,000 lives and still sees daily clashes
between pro-Russian and Ukrainian forces.

President Vladimir Putin last Thursday warned that any military
“provocations” while Russia hosts the football World Cup would have “very
severe consequences for Ukraine as a state”.

The UN Security Council condemned “continuous violations of the ceasefire”
and “the tragic humanitarian situation” on the frontline, and called for an
immediate withdrawal of heavy weapons.

The UN resolution last week was written by France with support from Germany
— the core EU powers that brokered the poorly observed 2015 Minsk peace
agreement — and was adopted unanimously, including by Russia.

After over a year on the back burner as the French, Germans and Russians
headed to the polls in 2017 and 2018, Paris, Berlin and Moscow have now
turned their focus back on Ukraine ahead of its own elections next year.

German Foreign Minister Heiko Maas, who is hosting the meeting, predicted
“tough” talks.

“The implementation of the Minsk accords stalled for too long — at the
expense of the people in eastern Ukraine, who wish for nothing more ardently
than peace,” he told the daily Bild.

“I have no illusions — the new start will be difficult. The interests and
standpoints of Ukraine and Russia are far apart in many areas.”

His French counterpart Jean-Yves Le Drian warned Friday that “the
credibility of the current peace process is at stake”, given a daily death
toll and deteriorating humanitarian situation.

The Berlin meeting is an attempt to restore dialogue between the two sides,
which blame each other for the ongoing conflict, and to discuss the more
distant goal of a blue-helmet UN peacekeeping force.

– ‘Malign activities’ –

Preparing the ground in a rare phone call Saturday, Putin and Ukrainian
President Petro Poroshenko discussed an “exchange of people being held” by
both sides.

But hopes for a diplomatic breakthrough are low at the Berlin meeting —
the first by the quartet in 16 months — given the high tensions and
deepening distrust between the West and Russia.

After a popular Ukrainian uprising ousted a Kremlin-backed president in
Kiev in 2014, Russia moved to annex the Crimea peninsula and back insurgents
in the former Soviet state.

Brussels responded to the territorial grab with a series of asset freezes
and travel bans as well as stinging economic sanctions, to which Moscow
retaliated in kind.

Since then, the US and European powers have accused Moscow of using hackers
and propaganda to sow discord, meddle in elections and back eurosceptics and
right-wing populists, as well as ramping up military posturing to threaten
eastern European states.

In Syria’s brutal civil war, which has killed more than 350,000 people and
displaced millions, Russia has since 2015 defied the West by unleashing a
bombing campaign to support Bashar al-Assad.

Relations hit a new low in March this year, as many western states expelled
Russian embassy staff over the alleged poisoning by Moscow of former double
agent Sergei Skripal and his daughter Yulia in Britain.

– ‘Bizarre fake news’ –

Putin, who was re-elected to a fourth term in March, has denied all the
charges and argued forcefully that hostile NATO powers are seeking to
demonise and weaken Russia.

Moscow also accused Kiev of spreading “bizarre” fake news after Ukraine’s
secret service last month staged the murder of Russian journalist Arkady
Babchenko, claiming it did so to foil a Russian plot on his life.

Amid the ill will, Ukraine has urged citizens not to travel to Russia for
the World Cup, warning they could be arrested on trumped-up spying charges.

Russia’s main goal is the lifting of damaging economic sanctions, a push
aided by the rise of sympathetic populist parties in the EU, most recently in
Italy.

On a visit last week to conservative Austrian Chancellor Sebastian Kurz,
whose far-right junior coalition partners back Russia’s claim of sovereignty
over Crimea, Putin insisted he hoped for a “united and prosperous” European
Union and denied any wish to “divide” the bloc.

France and Germany are firm that any sanctions relief for Russia must be
conditional on advances in the Ukraine peace process.

BSS/AFP/MRI/1747 hrs