US, Russia,
Ukraine and EU agree measures including end of violence, disarming of illegal
groups and amnesty for protesters
The Guardian, Julian Borger in Geneva and Alec Luhn in Donetsk, Thursday 17 April
2014
The US, Russia, Ukraine and the European Union have reached agreement on a series of immediate steps aimed at pulling eastern Ukraine back from the brink of war.
Seven hours of negotations in Geneva ended in agreement on a series of 'concrete steps'. Photograph: Eric Bridiers/EPA |
The US, Russia, Ukraine and the European Union have reached agreement on a series of immediate steps aimed at pulling eastern Ukraine back from the brink of war.
The deal,
clinched after a dramatic extended meeting in Geneva, calls for the disarming
of all illegal groups. In the next few days they would have to vacate all the
government buildings and public spaces they have occupied over the course of
the crisis.
In return,
the protesters in eastern Ukraine would be offered amnesty for all but capital
crimes and the government in Kiev would immediately start a process of public
consultation aimed at devolving constitutional powers to the provinces.
The
Organisation for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) will be given the
job not only of making sure the agreement will be put into practice but of
helping to implement it. The US, Russia and European countries would provide
monitors to beef up the OSCE's manpower, which would be given access across
Ukraine. Speaking after the deal was agreed, the US secretary of state, John
Kerry, made it clear that the US would hold Russia accountable for the
compliance of the pro-Russian protesters in eastern Ukraine.
"Responsibility
will lie with those who have organised their presence, provided them with the
weapons, put the uniforms on them, supported them, and have been engaged in the
process of guiding them over the course of this operation," Kerry said,
adding that the US had "made very clear that Russia has a huge impact on
all those forces. And we have made clear what the evidence is."
A planned
escalation of US sanctions on Russia would be suspended pending Russian
compliance "over the weekend".
The Geneva
meeting, which brought together Kerry, the Russian foreign minister, Sergei
Lavrov, Ukrainian counterpart Andrii Deshchytsia and the EU foreign policy
chief, Catherine Ashton, began with low expectations as clashes across eastern
Ukraine between government forces and armed protesters were escalating. At
least one demonstrator was killed when pro-Russian protesters tried to storm a
military base in the town of Mariupol. It was expected that the talks would
only last a couple of hours, and a room was prepared for Lavrov to talk to the
press at midday, raising concerns he might walk out of the negotiations.
In the end,
however, intense talks went on for seven hours, leading to the agreement,
intended "to de-escalate tensions and restore security for all
citizens".
The deal
has five main points:
• All sides
refrain from violence, and reject expressions "of extremism, racism and
religious intolerance, including antisemitism".
• All
illegal armed groups must be disarmed; all illegally seized buildings must be
returned; all illegally occupied streets and other public places in Ukrainian
cities and towns must be vacated.
• Amnesty
will be granted to protesters and to those who have left buildings and other
public places and surrendered weapons, with the exception of those found guilty
of capital crimes.
• The OSCE
would play a leading role in helping the authorities implement the agreement.
•
Constitutional reform would be inclusive, transparent and accountable.
The
agreement does not address the build-up of Russian troops on the Ukrainian
border, nor the beefing up of the Nato presence on Russia's western border,
announced on Wednesday by the alliance's secretary general, Anders Fogh
Rasmussen.
Kerry said
that Russia had withdrawn one battalion from the border region and had made
clear it would make further, bigger withdrawals as the Geneva agreement was
implemented.
Kerry drew
special attention to reports that antisemitic leaflets had been handed out to
Jews in Donetsk, calling on them to register with the separatist authorities.
The separatists denied responsibility.
Without
specifically assigning blame, Kerry said: "In the year 2014, after all the
violence and the journey of history, this is not just intolerable, it's
grotesque. It's beyond unacceptable. Whoever is involved in these activities,
wherever they crawled out of, there is no place for that."
Tensions
continued to rise in the east between residents supporting and opposing the new
Kiev government. Protesters gathered outside police headquarters in Stakhanov
to demand the local police chief's resignation. They attempted to storm the
building, but were reportedly repelled by residents who formed a human shield
in front of the station.
On
Thursday, hundreds gathered in Donetsk to demonstrate for Ukrainian territorial
integrity. The rally ended peacefully, unlike similar demonstrations in
previous weeks where pro-Russian protesters beat participants. Student Dima
Balakai said he was there to oppose the Russian-backed "bandits" occupying
the regional administration building.
"There
are no violations against the Russian language here," he said, referring
to pro-Russian protesters' tendency to blame Kiev for oppressing Russian
speakers. "If I speak Ukrainian at the institute, they could soon kick me
out."
He said he
was beaten by a crowd of young men at a similar rally on 4 March.
Activists
from the "people's republic" occupying the administration building
went to Donetsk airport to demand negotiations with officials. They told the
Guardian they wanted to prevent any military flights from landing, as well as
ensure that Russian citizens could arrive freely. The Russian airline Aeroflot
said the Ukrainian border service had placed an entry ban on Russian men aged
16 to 60. The Russian foreign ministry said it had requested more information
from its Ukrainian counterpart, but journalists at Kiev's Borispol airport
reported seeing Russian male passengers turned back.
Donetsk
activists said such an entry ban has already been in place de facto in eastern
Ukraine. Dima Prokopshuk said two friends from Russia whom he had invited to
his recent wedding were turned back at the Ukrainian border three times even
though they tried to enter from Crimea, Belgorod and Rostov-on-Don.
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