Russian President Vladimir Putin said on Saturday that
Moscow supports the Minsk peace agreements ratified in February in
Ukraine, but blamed Kiev for stalling the truce efforts.
An uneasy ceasefire saw hostilities between warring
factions in eastern Ukraine cool off for a few months, but a spate of
fighting in recent weeks has thrown the peace accord into uncertainty.
An unknown number of fighters were killed on Wednesday when clashes
broke out between Ukrainian troops and pro-Russia rebel forces in the
Donetsk region.
Putin blamed the fresh hostilities on Kiev, saying that
separatist forces had fulfilled their promise of withdrawing heavy
weapons from the fight. “It is time to begin implementing the Minsk
Agreements,” Putin reportedly told the paper.
He called on Kiev to undertake constitutional reforms — as
part of the agreement — that would allow the rebel breakaway regions in
the country’s east to become autonomous, and implement municipal
elections and amnesty.
“The problem is that the current Kiev authorities don’t
even want to sit down to talks with them. And there is nothing we can do
about it,” he reportedly said. “Only our European and American partners
can influence this situation.”
He also dismissed the worries of the European countries regarding Moscow as unfounded.
“As for some countries’ concerns about Russia’s possible
aggressive actions, I think that only an insane person and only in a
dream can imagine that Russia would suddenly attack NATO,” he said,
Radio Free Europe reported, citing Corriere della Sera. “I think some
countries are simply taking advantage of people’s fears with regard to
Russia,” he added. “Let me tell you something – there is no need to fear
Russia.”
He called Kiev’s economic severance from the rebel
territories a humanitarian crisis and urged the European Union to
provide more financial relief to the region. “Since we are talking about
what can or must be done, and by whom, I believe that the European
Union could surely provide greater financial assistance to Ukraine,” he
reportedly said.
Moscow has maintained that Kiev has instigated the
conflict, and that there are no Russian troops, except private
forces, fighting in the country. It has defended the right of the
breakaway regions, including the self-proclaimed Donetsk People’s
Republic, to secede from Ukraine.
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