No Script

Please Wait...

Al-Ahed Telegram

US, Russian Tension Escalates over Ukraine: Biden in Kiev

US, Russian Tension Escalates over Ukraine: Biden in Kiev
folder_openEurope... access_time10 years ago
starAdd to favorites

Local Editor

US Vice-President Joe Biden is to meet Ukraine's new leaders in a show of support for the pro-Western government.

US, Russian Tension Escalates over Ukraine: Biden in Kiev

Biden is due to discuss the forthcoming elections with the country's interim prime minister and president during his visit to Kiev.
A phone conversation between the US secretary of state and Russia's foreign minister earlier led to both sides blaming the other over the crisis.

Meanwhile, funerals are due to take place for three men shot on Sunday.
The men were killed during a raid on a checkpoint manned by pro-Russian separatists near the town of Sloviansk in eastern Ukraine.
The circumstances remain unclear. The local separatists said the attack was carried out by ultra-nationalist Right Sector militants. Kiev called it a "provocation" staged by Russian special forces.
Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov accused the Kiev authorities on Monday of breaking last week's Geneva accord on resolving the Ukraine crisis.

A pro-Russian militant looks out from the barricaded entrance of the city council building on 21 April 2014 in Sloviansk Pro-Russian militants are still holding official buildings in at least nine towns and cities in the Donetsk region.
Flowers lay in the road as a memorial to three men shot on Easter Sunday at a checkpoint near Sloviansk Flowers lie on the road near the site of Sunday's fatal shooting on the edge of Sloviansk.

He said the Kiev government - not recognized by Moscow - had not moved to disarm illegal groups, especially the Right Sector.
The authorities in Kiev say they were surprised by Lavrov's remarks and blame Russia for the instability.
In a phone call, Lavrov urged US Secretary of State John Kerry "to influence Kiev, to prevent hotheads there from provoking a bloody conflict," according to the Kremlin.

Meanwhile, the US state department said Kerry "urged Russia to take concrete steps to help implement the Geneva agreement, including publicly calling on separatists to vacate illegal buildings and checkpoints".
The 17 April Geneva accord was agreed at talks between Russia, Ukraine, the EU and US. It demanded an immediate end to violence in eastern Ukraine and called on illegal armed groups to surrender their weapons and leave official buildings.
Pro-Russian militants are still holding official buildings in at least nine towns and cities in the Donetsk region of eastern Ukraine.

The interim authorities in Kiev said they had suspended operations against pro-Russian militants over Easter, and appealed for national unity.
They promised to meet some of the demands of pro-Russian protesters, which include the decentralization of power and guarantees for the status of the Russian language.
The US State Department released a series of photos of soldiers in eastern Ukraine on Monday, which it says show that some of the fighters are Russian special forces.

The photos appeared to identify Russian soldiers, and show similarly equipped and armed fighters in different cities in eastern Ukraine.
There was no immediate response to the pictures from the Russian government.
Five photos provided by the Ukrainian government appear to show the same soldier [circled in red] in operations in Kramatorsk and Sloviansk in Ukraine, as well as a group photo showing a sabotage-reconnaissance group in the Russian Special Forces Photos released by the Ukrainian government purport to show a soldier, circled in red, in both Kramatorsk and Sloviansk, and in a photo showing a group in the Russian Special Forces.

The US vice-president will meet Ukraine's interim PM Arseniy Yatsenyuk and acting President Olexander Turchynov on Tuesday.
Biden is expected to announce technical support to the Kiev government, including economic and energy-related assistance.
The White House said President Barack Obama agreed Biden should make the two-day visit to Ukraine's capital to send a high-level signal of support for the reform efforts of Kiev's pro-Western government.

The elections on 25 May are seen as a crucial step in leading Ukraine out of the country's deepest political crisis since its independence in 1991.
Ukraine has been in turmoil since last November, when Kiev was gripped by protests against President Viktor Yanukovych over his rejection of an economic pact with the EU. He was toppled in February and fled to Russia.
Russian President Vladimir Putin on Monday submitted a bill to parliament to establish a gambling zone in Crimea.

The president approved a law making it easier for people in former Soviet republics to apply for Russian citizenship.
He also signed a decree to rehabilitate Crimea's Muslim Tatars and other ethnic minorities who suffered during the rule of Soviet dictator Josef Stalin.

Source: News Agencies, Edited by website team


Comments