Good morning. We'll start the live blog today with this short report from our news desk on the upcoming Easter Partnership summit in Riga, where Ukraine will presumably figure prominently in discussions:
European Union leaders are gathering in the Latvian capital, Riga, on May 21 for a summit with their counterparts from six eastern countries.
The number one question at the two-day meeting will be how the 28-member EU should reconcile its Eastern Partnership Program -- involving Armenia, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Georgia, Moldova and Ukraine -- with its relations to Russia.
Their last meeting, held in Vilnius in 2013, triggered the current crisis in Ukraine, after the country's former president Viktor Yanukovych backed out of a deal on closer ties with the European Union.
Months later, violent protests forced Yanukovych out of office. Tensions flared up in the east of the country, where a pro-Russian insurgency took hold.
Russia annexed the Crimean peninsula, leading to widespread condemnation and Western sanctions as relations soured.
Russia will be watching this week's summit closely. Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov has warned the EU against taking steps that could harm Russian interests.
(AFP, dpa)
That concludes our live-blogging of the Ukraine crisis for May 20, 2015. Check back here tomorrow morning for more of our continuing coverage.
International Red Cross visits two men detained in eastern Ukraine
GENEVA, May 20 (Reuters) -- The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) said on Wednesday it had visited two men captured in a part of eastern Ukraine hit by separatist conflict and that they were now in hospital in the capital Kiev.
Ukraine on Monday showed a video online of two prisoners it said were Russian soldiers who had killed Ukrainian soldiers in fighting in its east and said they would be prosecuted for "terrorist acts". Russia denies active military backing for pro-Russian separatist forces in Ukraine.
"A team from the ICRC which included a doctor has this afternoon visited the two men captured near Shchastya in the Lugansk region on 17th May and then transferred to Kiev," ICRC spokeswoman Jennifer Tobias told Reuters. "The aim of the visit was to assess their condition and help them establish and maintain contact with their families."
She declined to comment on the men's identity or status, adding: "We want to see everyone detained in connection with the conflict."
The Ukrainians have seized on the capture of the two men they identified as Russians, both wounded, to support their accusations of direct Russian involvement in the conflict despite a ceasefire signed in February.
Victoria Nuland, U.S. Assistant Secretary of State for European and Eurasian Affairs, speaking in Moscow on Monday, welcomed the Kiev government's public statements that the men were being well taken care of and that the ICRC would be allowed access to them.