Roman
Olearchyk in Kiev
Ukraine’s parliament has approved constitutional changes in a preliminary vote aimed at shifting power from Kiev to regional governments — including breakaway eastern areas — as part of a peace accord.
Fears have grown in recent weeks that the Minsk
accord is falling apart. It was signed in February in the Belarusian capital
and designed to put a halt to
fighting between
Ukraine’s army and separatist rebels.
Eight Ukrainian soldiers were killed and a
further 16 wounded in fighting this week, adding to a death toll of more than
100 since the Minsk agreement was brokered. According to the most recent UN
estimates, almost 6,800 people have been killed in the 16-month conflict.
In a statement on Thursday, Ukraine’s defence
ministry described the situation as “difficult, with a tendency of escalation
in past days”.
The recent fighting demonstrates how the fragile
Minsk accord that failed to deliver a full ceasefire is continuing to unravel
gradually amid growing fears of a return to full-scale fighting.
While a final vote, fully upholding the
devolution changes to the law, is expected later in the year, separatist
leaders swiftly rejected the initiative on the grounds that it did not offer
them sufficient “special status” or autonomy.
Denis Pushilin, a representative of Donetsk-based
separatists in peace talks, was quoted by local news agencies as saying the
draft “does not conform with [the] Minsk principles”.
Under the new rules, backed by the US and EU,
local authorities would hold elections in accordance with
domestic law, giving temporary self-rule to the
Russian-backed breakaway eastern regions of Donetsk and Luhansk.
The proposals were backed by 288 lawmakers in
the 450-seat legislature in Kiev, and the draft law was sent to the
constitutional court for review. Parliament must approve the amendment again —
with 300 votes — for it to take effect.
Russia, which is accused by the west of backing
the separatist rebels, did not immediately comment on how the constitutional
changes could affect further implementation of the Minsk peace agreement.
But in a phone call with Mark Rutte, the Dutch
prime minister, President Vladimir Putin of Russia described initiatives to set
up an international tribunal to prosecute those behind last year’s shooting
down of Malaysian Airlines flight MH17 as “counterproductive.”
Russia continues to deny claims by Kiev and the
west that it provided a Buk surface-to-air rocket that shot down the airliner a
year ago, killing all 298 people aboard.
Speaking in parliament before the vote on the
constitution, President Petro Poroshenko of Ukraine ruled out granting special
status to the separatist enclaves, and clarified plans to preserve the country
as a “unitary state”.
Mr Poroshenko described decentralising authority
to regional governing bodies as a “crucial centrepiece” for implementing the
Minsk accords and reforms aimed at cracking widespread corruption, and raising
living standards across the war-torn and recession-battered country by delivering
more effective governance.
In separate votes on Thursday, Ukraine’s
lawmakers adopted legislation on banking, utility tariff regulation and
anti-corruption initiatives, which are the last requirements for unlocking a
$1.7bn tranche from a $17.5bn International Monetary Fund bailout.
Officials said progress was made on Wednesday in
debt-restructuring talks held with creditors, with the aim of freeing up an
additional $15bn in finances in coming years.
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