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A pro-Russian militant from the 'Russian Orthodox Army', seen at a check point near the Donetsk airport, on June 10, 2014/AFP

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Russia, Ukraine seek to build peace momentum at gas talks

A pro-Russian militant from the 'Russian Orthodox Army', seen at a check point near the Donetsk airport, on June 10, 2014/AFP

A pro-Russian militant from the ‘Russian Orthodox Army’, seen at a check point near the Donetsk airport, on June 10, 2014/AFP

BRUSSELS, Jun 11 – Russia and Ukraine resume crunch talks in Brussels on Wednesday to avert a gas crisis for Europe and build on a tentative push by Kiev’s new president towards peace after months of conflict.

Western-backed Ukraine President Petro Poroshenko on Tuesday ordered the creation of humanitarian corridors in the separatist east that could save civilians and advance his plan to end nearly two months of fighting by the end of the week.

His initiative meets a major demand by Moscow, and helps address growing concern among rights groups about Kiev’s use of firepower in heavily-populated areas to suppress the pro-Russian insurgency.

But the 48-year-old chocolate baron and political veteran stopped short of accepting the Kremlin’s request to allow Russian aid into the eastern rustbelt a move Kiev fears could be used to help arm the rebels.

Russia said the corridor decision was “welcome” but left room for concern that Poroshenko might only step up his offensive once civilians leave for safer parts of Ukraine.

“Military operations are continuing and even intensifying in a number of cases,” Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said after meeting his German and Ukrainian counterparts in Saint Petersburg.

But German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier said he saw “the light at the end of the tunnel” and a “readiness from all sides to act to de-escalate the crisis”.

 

Poroshenko has unveiled plans to end the rebellion that has killed more than 200 and shaken the foundation of the splintered ex-Soviet state.

His efforts include the high-stakes negotiations to stave off a Russian threat to turn off its gas supply to Kiev, a move that would also impact Europe and plunge economically-devastated Ukraine into even deeper recession.

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About 15 percent of Europe’s gas from Russia transits through Ukraine  a dependence that EU nations have been trying to limit ever since suffering similar disruptions in 2006 and 2009.

A marathon round of EU-mediated gas talks broke up in Brussels early Tuesday without a deal as a deadline set by Russia for an agreement arrived.

Announced trilateral talks later Tuesday failed to materialise, while the negotiators from both sides consulted with their respective capitals.

EU Energy Commissioner Gunther Oettinger, brokering the Brussels talks, said the Russian and Ukrainian Energy Ministers would resume their head-to-head discussions at 0730 GMT Wednesday on the fraught gas issue.

Oettinger warned that an overall agreement should not be expected “for several days”.

Russia had set a deadline for Ukraine to cover a debt Moscow puts at $4.5 billion (3.3 billion euros) or have its shipments end Wednesday.

Ukraine has refused to pay the gas bill in protest at Russia’s decision to nearly double its rates in the wake of the February ouster of Kiev’s Kremlin-friendly president after months of pro-EU protests.

Analysts had expected the two sides to agree to a new price of around $350 per thousand cubic metres of gas — a sum about halfway between Russia’s old rate and the one set after the rise to power of the new pro-Western authorities.

But Kiev appears to be taking a hardline position by demanding the same price Russia awarded the previous authorities.

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The multi-pronged peace push by Poroshenko prompted only suspicion among the pro-Russia rebels in eastern Ukraine.

A top leader in the self-proclaimed “Donetsk People’s Republic” said the level of violence inflicted on the region made him doubt the real intention behind Poroshenko’s civilian corridors.

“We heard about this initiative but doubt it will come into force,” Donetsk “deputy governor” Andriy Purgin told Russia’s Interfax news agency.

The government’s assault  dubbed an “anti-terrorist operation” by Kiev, and a “punitive operation” by Moscow has gathered considerable momentum since Poroshenko’s May 25 election.

The fighting has engulfed two economically vital regions that are home to seven million people and have extensive trade and cultural ties to Russia.

The battles are now primarily being waged along Ukraine’s border with Russia and outside Slavyansk  a city of 120,000 that was the first of a dozen to fall under rebel command in early April.

A Ukrainian military source told AFP that government forces had also successfully repelled a second attempt by guerrillas to seize the main airport in the neighbouring region of Lugansk since the weekend.

But rights groups question whether Ukraine’s growing reliance on artillery fire in Slavyansk and neighbouring towns was entirely justified.

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“Criminal conduct by the insurgents does not relieve the Ukrainian forces of their obligations to act in accordance with international law,” Human Rights Watch said in a letter to Poroshenko.

Meanwhile US State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki hit back at Russia’s “propaganda machine,” accusing it of being behind a series of Internet slurs mocking her for stumbling over her words.

Psaki is regularly critical of Moscow’s role in the crisis in Ukraine, and has become an easy target of Russian media and bloggers.

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