
Russian envoy Lukin says questions remain about Ukraine peace deal
21 February 2014, 20:18
A Russian envoy sent to Kiev by President Vladimir Putin said talks to resolve Ukraine's crisis produced progress, but indicated Moscow had questions about the EU-brokered peace deal and confirmed he did not sign it, Interfax reported on Friday.
'Certain questions still remain, consultations will continue, this is a normal process,' Interfax quoted Vladimir Lukin as saying after returning to Moscow.
Consultations over resolution of the situation in Ukraine will continue, Russian Human Rights Commissioner Vladimir Lukin said after returning to Moscow from Kiev.
'We talked. We clarified each other's positions. We shall continue consultations. In this sense, there is certainly progress,' Lukin told Interfax on Friday night. I did not sign the agreement settling the Ukrainian crisis, he said. 'No, I did not. Several issues remain. Consultations will continue, it is a normal process,' Lukin said.
'I do not know, it will be decided here, in Moscow, in a calm atmosphere,' Lukin said when asked about plans to visit Kiev again.
'Dialogue will definitely continue. But who will continue it, how and in what sequence, that is a technical and diplomatic matter that will be discussed,' he said.
'There is a chance of achieving peace in Ukraine. People are working on it. But the situation there is very complicated and quite fluid, people you have to talk too are coming and going. The conversation will continue, including with our partners in Europe,' the ombudsman said.
Russia's Lukin didn't sign document on outcome of Ukrainian gov't, opposition, and EU officials talks
Russian ombudsman Vladimir Lukin, who was sent by Russian President Vladimir Putin to Kiev to act as a mediator in the negotiations between the Ukrainian government and representatives of the opposition and the EU countries, refused to sign the final document on the settlement of the crisis in Ukraine, said a source close to the negotiation process.
Russia's Duma ready for constructive dialogue with new Ukrainian authorities
The State Duma (lower house of the Federal Assembly of Russia) has stated it will be ready to cooperate with the new Ukrainian authorities even if this cooperation proves uneasy.
'Ukraine is a fraternal nation to us. However inconvenient and difficult the new authorities will be for us, we shall talk to them at all levels,' head of the Duma Committee for CIS Affairs, Eurasian Integration and Ties with Compatriots Leonid Slutsky told reporters on Friday.
Most likely, the draft agreement stipulating early elections, coalition government formation with a ten-day period and a return to the 2004 Constitution will be signed by all parties to the negotiating process in Kiev, he said.
'If this agreement is signed, it will by no means separate us from the Ukrainian people. The new authorities are not a reason for uneasy statements, this is a reason for constructive dialogue,' he said.
Putin meets Russia's Security Council members to discuss Ukraine crisis
Russian President Vladimir Putin held a conference with the permanent members of the Russian Security Council to address the situation in Ukraine on Friday, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said.
Taking part in the meeting were Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev, Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu and other high-ranking officials.
The conference was also attended by Federation Council Chair Valentina Matviyenko, State Duma Chairman Sergei Naryshkin, presidential chief of staff Sergei Ivanov, Security Council Secretary Nikolai Patrushev, his deputy Rashid Nurgaliyev, Interior Minister Vladimir Kolokoltsev, Federal Security Service (FSB) Director Alexander Bortnikov, Foreign Intelligence Service (SVR) chief Mikhail Fradkov, and Security Council permanent member Boris Gryzlov.
'The situation in Ukraine was discussed at the conference,' Peskov said.
Putin emphasizes it's imperative to immediately stop bloodshed in Ukraine
Russian President Vladimir Putin has held telephone conversations with German Chancellor Angela Merkel and UK Prime Minister David Cameron, the Kremlin press service said. 'The sides voiced their extreme concern over the sharp escalation of the armed confrontation in Ukraine that happened through the fault of the opposition's radical wing,' it said.
'Putin emphasized that it is imperative to immediately stop the bloodshed and take urgent measures to stabilize the situation and suppress any extremist and terrorist sorties,' the press service said.
'The Russian president informed Merkel and Cameron that Russia's Commissioner for Human Rights Vladimir Lukin was heading to Kiev for the purposes of mediation,' it said.
At Yanukovych's request, Russia's President Putin sending envoy to Kiev as mediator
President of Russia Vladimir Putin sends Ombudsman Vladimir Lukin to Kiev, as a mediator in negotiations with the opposition, at the request of President of Ukraine Viktor Yanukovych, Press-Secretary of the Russian leader, Dmitry Peskov, said.
'A telephone conversation between President Putin and President Yanukovych was carried out on the initiative of the Ukrainian side, during which the President of Ukraine suggested that the head of the Russian state should send a Russian representative to Kiev to participate in the negotiation process with the opposition as a mediator,' Peskov said.
The Russian leader's Press Secretary said that 'Putin has made the decision to send Ombudsman Vladimir Lukin on this mission'.
It is known, that Vladimir Petrovich (Lukin) has an abundance of experience in diplomatic service, and a considerable reputation among human rights defenders; he has headed a major opposition party,' Peskov reminded.
Sanctions threat against Ukraine looks like blackmail - Sergei Lavrov
Russia's Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov has condemned Western threats of sanctions against Ukraine as blackmail and double-standard approach.
The foreign minister is on a working trip in the Iraqi capital of Baghdad. He said at a press conference that Ukraine's opposition couldn't or simply wouldn't 'dissociate itself from extremist forces.'
'The possibility of sanctions is nothing but an attempt at bullying,' Lavrov said during a news conference in Baghdad, in remarks translated from Russian into Arabic.
Mr. Lavrov accused the United States of double standards as it piled all the blame on the Ukrainian government.
'The EU is mulling sanctions while paying uncalled-for visits to Ukraine,' he added. 'This behaviour looks like blackmail [to me].'
Ukraine and western countries should stand apart from radicals – Russia
Ukraine and the West should stay apart from radicals, Sergey Lavrov, Russian Foreign Minister, said. 'Russia thinks that Ukraine opposition as well as western countries should stay apart from extremists and other radicals,' said Lavrov during the press-conference in Bagdad on Thursday. This Tuesday, mass disorders escalated in Kiev again.
During the Verkhovna Rada meeting, the opposition insisted on return of the parliamentary-presidential form of government and on putting the Constitution of 2004 in force again.
Aggressive protestors wanted to approach the building of Ukrainian Parliament, they seized the buildings in the center of Kiev, burned tire-covers, threw stones and Molotov cocktails in the law enforcers. According to the police, the radicals use fire arms.
Russia's Lavrov blames West for forcing Ukraine into EU
The demand to hold early elections in Ukraine is aimed at forcing Ukraine to choose Europe, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said.
'You probably heard more than once that the capitals of Western European countries have demanded that the people of Ukraine should be given the freedom to choose, and they added that the choice should be in favor of the European Union,' Lavrov told a press conference in Baghdad.
'Their purpose in the current initiatives is to essentially force this choice is evident to the Ukrainian administration: the demand to hold parliamentary and early presidential elections as soon as possible and to form a coalition government. That is, they are trying to decide everything for them,' Lavrov said.
Voice of Russia, RIA, Interfax
NEWSLETTER
|
Join the GlobalSecurity.org mailing list |
|
|