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Ukraine, rebels withdraw 'lion's share' of weapons: Poroshenko

Published: 10 Mar 2015 - 02:39 pm | Last Updated: 16 Jan 2022 - 08:19 pm

 

Kiev--Both sides in the conflict in eastern Ukraine have withdrawn most of their heavy weapons from the frontline, bolstering a month-old truce, Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko has said.
In an interview with state television Monday evening Poroshenko said government forces had "withdrawn the lion's share of multiple launch rocket systems and heavy artillery."
"We see that the Russian-backed militants have also withdrawn a significant part," he added.
Poroshenko confirmed that the ceasefire deal hammered out by France, Germany, Russia and Ukraine in the Belarussian capital Minsk on February 12 was largely holding, despite sporadic deadly clashes.
Artillery fire had halted among most of the 485-kilometre frontline, after Kiev "managed to stop the aggressors," he said.
But the army was still sustaining losses in some flashpoints, with 64 soldiers killed since the peace deal came into effect on February 15, bringing to 1,549 the number killed since the war started, he said.
However, Kiev's forces sustained around a third of the fatalities when separatists forced them out of the transport hub of Debaltseve three days into the truce.
Since then the fighting has considerably abated, with both sides making a show of towing away rocket launchers and other big guns used in the 11 months of fighting that has killed over 6,000 people.
The separatists rarely announce their own casualty figures.
Ukraine and the West accuse Russia of providing separatists with troops, training and weaponry. Moscow denies this, but despite the lull has remained under strong diplomatic pressure from European capitals and Washington.
- Russia 'undermining' East Europe -
British Foreign Secretary Philip Hammond on Tuesday accused President Vladimir Putin of undermining other former Soviet republics, besides Ukraine.
"We are now faced with a Russian leader bent not on joining the international rules-based system which keeps the peace between nations, but on subverting it," Hammond told the Royal United Services Institute (RUSI) in London.
"President Putin's actions -- illegally annexing Crimea and now using Russian troops to destabilise eastern Ukraine -- fundamentally undermine the security of sovereign nations in Eastern Europe," he said as NATO forces prepared for a major exercise in the Baltic states.
US military officials said that deployment of some 3,000 troops had begun for the three-month Operation Atlantic Resolve. The exercise will see NATO forces working alongside their allies in Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania.
The United States also said Monday that it had delivered more than 100 pieces of heavy military equipment to the Baltic states.

- Rebels demand negotiations -
The uneasy calm in eastern Ukraine has been riven with mutual accusations of repeated ceasefire violations.
On Monday, the Ukrainian army accused the separatists of using mortars and a tank to fire on government positions near the eastern port of Mariupol.

AFP