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Pro-Russian separatists assemble on July 16 on the field where MH17 crashed almost one year ago, killing all 298 on board.
Pro-Russian separatists assemble on July 16 on the field where MH17 crashed almost one year ago, killing all 298 on board.

Live Blog: Ukraine In Crisis (ARCHIVE)

Follow all of the developments as they happen

14:36 31.5.2015

16:23 31.5.2015

So if bikers were blocked, maybe on horseback? From AFP:

A group of Russian Cossacks have set off on a horse trek from Moscow to Berlin to commemorate 70 years since the WWII defeat of Nazi Germany, the event organiser said Sunday.

Some 20 horsemen aim to spend the next month covering the roughly 2,500 kilometres to Germany, travelling through Belarus and Poland along the route taken by Soviet cavalry during World War II.

"We plan that they will arrive in Berlin by July 22," the organiser Pavel Moshchalkov told AFP, after the riders set off from the Russian capital on Saturday.

Footage broadcast on Russian television showed the Cossacks in military dress uniform -- complete with ceremonial swords -- riding through Moscow carrying a Russian flag.

The horse trek comes after a fiercely nationalist motorcycle gang backed by President Vladimir Putin sparked outrage in Eastern Europe by trying to ride to Berlin to celebrate the Red Army's victory earlier this month.

Bikers from the Night Wolves group were turned back at the Polish and Lithuanian border as Moscow and Warsaw engaged in a diplomatic spat over the trip.

The people behind the horseback event -- which has been funded by private contributions -- insisted that their journey was amicable and was hoping to avoid any controversy.

"It is a journey of friendship. The Germans have reacted positively to our trips but how the Poles will react is difficult to say," Moshchalkov said, pointing to an earlier succesful horse ride from Russia to France in 2012.

"The event is absolutely apolitical. There are no links to any politics."

Moscow's regional government said in a statement that the Cossacks would hold cultural events, including concerts and horse shows, along the way, and be joined by horsemen from Poland and Germany.

Russia and the West are currently locked in a bitter standoff over the Ukraine crisis, with countries in eastern Europe especially eyeing Moscow's meddling in its ex-Soviet neighbour with trepidation.

19:30 31.5.2015

19:37 31.5.2015

22:14 31.5.2015

22:16 31.5.2015

This ends our live blogging for May 31. Be sure to check back tomorrow for our continuing coverage.

07:45 1.6.2015

EBRD Team Visiting Kyiv; IMF Lowers 2015 Growth Forecast​

By RFE/RL

Senior officials from the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD) are arriving in Kyiv on June 1 for five days of talks on Ukraine’s political and economic reforms.

The EBRD delegation includes members of the bank’s board of directors such as Tamsyn Barton, who represents the European Investment Bank, and Peter Bash, the EBRD’s acting director representing the European Union.

The visit comes a day after the International Monetary Fund lowered its forecast for Ukraine’s war-battered economy, predicting the economy will contract by 9 percent during 2015 -- due in large part to "the unresolved conflict in the east."

The revision followed a two-week visit by an IMF delegation to Kyiv that was completed on May 29.

Despite that move, the IMF gave a positive assessment of progress by Kyiv’s government on reform.

Ukraine is nearly bankrupt and is fighting a war in its east against Russian-backed separatists.

The government in Kyiv is hoping the IMF will disburse a second tranche of credit of about $2.5 billion under its four-year, $17.5 billion bailout program.

With additional reporting by Reuters, AFP, and Interfax
08:19 1.6.2015

08:50 1.6.2015
Ukrainian Forces Dig In For Potential Conflict In Kharkiv
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0:00 0:01:05 0:00

Symbols of Ukraine's Strength Hide Tension in Kharkiv

Fortifications and flags project Ukrainian power in Kharkiv, just down the road from Russia. But more than a year after a failed attempt by pro-Russian activists to seize control of Ukraine's second-largest city, symbols of strength cannot mask the tensions that threaten to undermine Kyiv.​ Read the full story by RFE/RL's Glenn Kates here.

08:54 1.6.2015

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