The incident in question was Sunday:
Confirming what our Brussels correspondent was tweeting earlier today. This from our newsroom:
EU foreign ministers have approved an expanded sanctions list over Ukraine's conflict but will wait to implement the measures in order to see if a proposed four-way Ukraine peace summit makes progress.
French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius said in Brussels on February 9 that "the principle of the sanctions will be kept, but their implementation will depend on the situation on the ground."
He said the EU will assess the situation again on February 16.
Earlier on February 9, German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier raised doubts about the Minsk peace summit scheduled for February 11, suggesting it was not yet certain it would take place.
Steinmeier said there much work must be done on “open points” before the leaders of Russia, Ukraine, France, and Germany would meet.
Putin also has said Minsk summit would not take place if the four leaders fail to agree on a "number of points" before February 11.
Based on reporting by AFP and Reuters
WATCH today's Daily Vertical from Brian Whitmore: The Long Game In Ukraine
French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius speaking as he arrives for the EU Foreign Affairs Council meeting in Brussels today:
"We hope that there will be a meeting on Wednesday in Minsk in the Normandy format as we call it -- that is the Ukrainian president, the Russian president, the German chancellor, and the French president. The objective is to have a de-escalation and peace, but we are not at all assured of the result. We have to remain prudent."
"The principle of the sanctions" -- a reference to visa bans and asset freezes -- "after the Mariupol [attack on January 24] is sustained, but their application depends on the situation on the ground. In practice they will take effect as of next Monday."