Ukrainian film director Oleh Sentsov and activist Oleksandr Kolchenko sing the Ukrainian anthem after hearing their sentence
Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko tweets: “Hang in there, Oleh. The time will come when those who organized this mock trial for you, will find themselves on the dock”
Ukraine clashes kill five despite new EU push for peace
Kiev, Aug 25, 2015 (AFP) -- Ukraine and pro-Russian rebels on Tuesday reported the deaths of five people in clashes in the east that raged despite a new EU push to end one of Europe's bloodiest conflicts in decades.
A spokesman for the army in Kiev said four servicemen were killed and 12 injured in mortar fire exchanges across the eastern separatist province of Donetsk.
"The situation is getting worse," Oleksandr Motuzyanyk told a daily press briefing. "The rebels' attacks have intensified."
Pro-Russian militia commander Eduard Basurin told AFP that Ukrainian shells had killed one civilian and wounded another 12 in the rebels' de facto capital of Donetsk and their nearby stronghold of Gorlivka.
The continuing violence brings to nearly 6,900 the number of people killed since Ukraine's industrial east was overrun by pro-Kremlin gunmen and what Kiev believes are Russian troops.
Moscow denies sparking the uprising in reprisal for the February 2014 unseating of a Russian-backed president by a pro-Western leadership that is seeking future membership in the European Union and possibly NATO.
But Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko said in an address marking 24 years of post-Soviet independence on Monday that 9,000 Russian servicemen were among the 40,000 fighters of the separatist force.
The US State Department on Monday also insisted that it was "the combined Russian separatist forces, and not Ukrainian forces, who are initiating aggressive activities" that resumed with renewed vigour earlier this month.
The unceasing fighting has left in shambles a six-month armistice that the heads of Germany and France helped negotiate in the Belarussian capital Minsk.
Poroshenko met German Chancellor Angela Merkel and French President Francois Hollande for crisis talks that notably did not include Russia's Vladimir Putin.
The two EU heads of state still see the Minsk deal as the only solution to a conflict that has shattered Moscow's relations with most Western powers and renewed fears of Russia's invasion of former communist eastern European states.
"Everything must be done so the ceasefire can become a reality," Merkel said heading into Monday's meeting with Poroshenko and Hollande.
An excerpt:
The war in Ukraine, we are often told, is a “civil war” involving “rebels” fighting the central government in Kiev. Such restrictive, inaccurate terms greatly misrepresent the conflict, which has already killed over 6,500 and displaced at least 1.4m Ukrainians.
Too often, the crisis is talked about as if it’s entirely internal to Ukraine, a domestic affair presumably brought on by language politics, identity clashes and historical grievances. Best, therefore, to leave it alone. Wrong.
Ukraine is waging a war of self-defence against an international aggressor – the Russian Federation – whose conduct threatens our collective security. This war is now 18 months old, and we should know better by now.
Here is today's map of the security situation in eastern Ukraine, according to the National Security and Defense Council (CLICK TO ENLARGE):