Archive for the ‘Ukraine’ Category

One woman killed during Ukraine ceasefire – Video


One woman killed during Ukraine ceasefire
In Ukraine, Kiev and pro-Russian rebels are accusing each other of breaking the fragile ceasefire.

By: Yu-Gi-Oh! Zexal 2

Go here to read the rest:
One woman killed during Ukraine ceasefire - Video

#icebucketchallenge #Ukraine – Video


#icebucketchallenge #Ukraine
icebucketchallenge #Ukraine.

By: Bogdan Maslij

Read this article:
#icebucketchallenge #Ukraine - Video

Russian Tanks in Ukraine: Kremlin reportedly building up army presence in east Ukraine despite truce – Video


Russian Tanks in Ukraine: Kremlin reportedly building up army presence in east Ukraine despite truce
Russia has reportedly sent another 12 tanks and 48 armoured personnel carriers into Ukraine #39;s Luhansk region, stoking fears that the Kremlin is exploiting the current ceasefire to cement its...

By: UKRAINE TODAY

See more here:
Russian Tanks in Ukraine: Kremlin reportedly building up army presence in east Ukraine despite truce - Video

Ukraine's president to address Canadian Parliament next week

Published September 11, 2014

OTTAWA, Ontario Ukraine's president is going to visit Canada next week and address Parliament.

Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper's office said Thursday that President Petro Poroshenko will also meet with Harper during his Sept. 17 visit.

Harper said in a statement that the visit will provide an opportunity for the two leaders to discuss the ongoing situation in Ukraine, with a particular focus on the steps required to restore Ukraine's territorial integrity.

The prime minister has been a vocal supporter of Ukraine in its ongoing dispute with Russia and has been a trenchant critic of Russian President Vladimir Putin. Harper has accused Putin of backing the Russian separatists in eastern Ukraine.

Harper was also the first G7 leader to visit Ukraine when the crisis started earlier this year.

Read the original here:
Ukraine's president to address Canadian Parliament next week

Ukraine president says most Russian troops have left

September 10, 2014: Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko, right, talks with Prime Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk in Kiev, Ukraine. (AP Photo/Andrew Kravchenko, Pool)

Ukraine's president has claimed that most Russian forces have left his country in the latest conciliatory move aimed at stoking a peace campaign that began last week, while the European Union slapped new economic sanctions on Russia.

Reuters reported that Petro Poroshenko told a televised Cabinet meeting that "70 percent of Russian troops have been moved back across the border ... This further strengthens our hope that the peace initiatives have good prospects."

He also said 700 Ukrainian prisoners had been freed from rebel captivity and expressed hope that another 500 would be freed by the end of the week.

Estimates of the number of Russian troops that have taken part in the five-month old Ukrainian conflict have varied, with NATO estimating that at least 1,000 regular forces have been involved. For its part, Moscow has repeatedly denied training or equipping separatist rebels in eastern Ukraine.

Poroshenko added the cease-fire was being tested by "terrorists" who attempted to provoke Ukrainian government forces. Ukraine claims that five servicemen have been killed during the cease-fire, while a civilian also died as a result of shelling in the port city of Mariupol.

On Thursday, two volleys of Grad rocket fire rang out in Ukraine's eastern, rebel-held city of Donetsk. The city council of Donetsk confirmed in a statement there had been multiple explosions during the morning, but reported no casualties.

Poroshenko said government forces are "regrouping" in an effort to defend Ukrainian territory from further attacks by separatists, who succeeded in breaking Kiev's encirclement of Donetsk and Luhansk with a fresh Russian-backed offensive just prior to last week's cease-fire.

New sanctions that the European Union imposed on Russia will further curb access to European capital markets for Russian firms and banks, limit exports of certain high-technology goods and target several officials with travel bans and asset freezes, diplomats told The Associated Press in Brussels.

The sanctions will take effect Friday following their publication in the EU's official journal but will be reversible if the situation in eastern Ukraine improves, four diplomats said independently. They spoke on condition of anonymity pending the official announcement.

The rest is here:
Ukraine president says most Russian troops have left