Russian-backed Ukrainian separatists continued to shell government positions in the country's contested east despite a
truce agreement
Meanwhile, a British parliamentary report published today accuses Europe's leaders and diplomats of a "catastrophic misreading" of the mood in the Kremlin ahead of the crisis that has plunged Ukraine into turmoil and threatened to re-draw the post-Cold War map in the region.
According to Reuters:
NPR's Corey Flintoff sums up the situation on the ground: "There's really not much incentive for the Russians and the separatists to stop fighting. They captured an important town yesterday, four days after the cease-fire was supposed to have taken effect. The cease-fire agreement is vague about where these two sides should stop and there's no penalty for those who want to keep advancing."
The town in question is Debaltseve. Ukrainian government troops beat a demoralizing withdrawal on Thursday,
The New York Times writes.
Fighting also raged around the port city of Mariupol. On Wednesday,
Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko called on the United Nations to provide peacekeeping forces
The Times adds:
"None of the provisions of the peace accord, forged during a marathon overnight negotiating session last week in Minsk, Belarus, have been accomplished according to the agreement's terms and timeline."There has been no halt in fighting. A Tuesday deadline for beginning the withdrawal of heavy weaponry came and went, with shells and rockets still falling. And there has been no apparent movement toward a release of prisoners."
Meanwhile, the
BBC
"The (British) government has not been as active or as visible on this issue as it could have been," the committee also said.
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