Almost one year after the Minsk agreement to resolve the Ukraine crisis,
diplomats are working frantically behind the scenes but the two sides are still
entrenched. Frank Hofmann reports from Kyiv.
Since
the end of Orthodox Christmas in the first week of January, diplomats have
again been meeting every Wednesday in Minsk. Also present at the meetings are
representatives of the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe
(OSCE) and moderators from its member states, including Germany and France.
Several "working groups" then discuss political and economic
questions and breaches of the ceasefire between Ukrainians, Russians, and the
Russian-backed rebels.
The OSCE observers have plenty to worry
about, because fighting is on the increase again, and weapons are being brought
back into the buffer zone. Economic issues are being negotiated with a German
representative from the Foreign Office in Berlin as mediator.
The rebels'
representatives and Russia are mostly demanding an end to Kyiv's economic
blockade of the occupied territories. Kyiv points out that "hardly any
banks will be prepared to send a security van there full of money" - which
could be used to pay people's pensions or social security benefits. Kyiv's
argument is that you might as well transfer the money directly to the rebels.
Sanctions as a trump card
The negotiators of the "political
working group" meet twice every week. While they're putting in a lot of
time, they're not necessarily achieving much in the way of results. These
meetings discuss the various points of the Minsk peace accord, which will decide
the future of the territories in eastern Ukraine currently occupied by
pro-Russian rebels. How should elections be held there in future? What kind of
status should the region be given? How can Ukraine regain control of its border
with Russia? Nothing
has been clarified.
"We need a new impetus to get us
out of the blind alley," says a high-ranking Ukrainian diplomat in Kyiv.
The Ukrainian president Petro Poroshenko is in Berlin for talks today
(01.02.2016). In particular, though, there is talk of the foreign ministers of
the so-called "Normandy format" - Germany, France, Russia and Ukraine
- meeting again next week, in advance of the Munich Security Conference.
Russia's foreign minister Sergey Lavrov was the first to name a date:
08.02.2016.
Moscow wants to get rid of the sanctions
the EU and the US imposed on it when the war in Ukraine began. The EU states
recently extended the sanctions until the summer. The Kremlin is also said to
be prepared to sacrifice the rebel leaders it has been backing in the cities of
Donetsk and Luhansk. But all this is rumor.
New Russian arms deliveries
What's missing are friendly signals from
the Kremlin that it's ready to negotiate. In January, Victoria Nuland, the US
assistant secretary of state for European and Eurasian affairs, met Putin's
close ally Vladislav Surkov - who has been given responsibility for Ukraine -
in the Russian enclave Kaliningrad. "We were immediately informed of the
results of the talks," says the Kyiv diplomat. However, he adds that Moscow
did not put forward any concrete proposals.
"The
Kremlin wants to negotiate from a position of strength," says another
observer in Kyiv. This explains the recent troop movements by the Moscow-backed
rebels. In a written communiqué at the end of January, the Ukrainian foreign
ministry stated that, "according to the findings of the Ukrainian security
services," weapons had again been transported on freight trains across the
border from Russia to the rebels.
The Minsk accord of February 2015 should have
prevented this. According to the agreement, Kyiv should have been controlling
its border with Russia for four weeks already. Right now, though, not even the
OSCE observers are able to access all the border crossings.
Hardly any key points implemented
And Ukraine isn't delivering any more,
either. So far, Kyiv has not passed any law that would enable elections to take
place in the separatist regions, and constitutional reform with a view to
decentralization – which would not only give these regions special status but
would also give the confident provinces of western Ukraine greater independence
from the central power in Kyiv – has ground to a halt. President Poroshenko was
unable to get a three-quarter parliamentary majority in support of the reform.
The question of whether the Kyiv rebels
will be given an amnesty is also still open. "Only after legal
examination," says the Ukrainian foreign minister, Pavlo Klimkin. Moscow
wants a general amnesty. The argument has been going round in circles for
months at the negotiating tables in the Belarusian capital, Minsk.
"We need clear guarantees now that
what is agreed will also be implemented," says the high-ranking Kyiv
diplomat. Otherwise the talks will go nowhere. "I want to know what will
happen if one side doesn't implement the agreement."
A new timetable, then. Newspapers in
Kyiv are already talking about a "Minsk III Treaty," but without much
hope of its implementation. After all, the first agreement, made in September
2014, fell apart during what they refer to as the "Russian aggression"
and fighting of the following winter, and that led to the German- and
French-led negotiations one year ago. The "immediate ceasefire"
agreed at the time was only partially achieved more than six months later.
They've obviously got used to this state of affairs in Kyiv. There are very few
people who still believe there can be a quick solution to the conflict in
eastern Ukraine.
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