President Petro Poroshenko met with U.S. Vice President Joe Biden in New York on September 29. The two discussed implementation of the Minsk agreement, according to the presidential press office.
“The parties agreed that Russia must fully implement the Minsk agreements,” reads the statement.
Biden emphasized that Ukraine’s security issue is in no way related to the situation around the conflict in Syria.
At the beginning of today’s hearing in Nadia Savchenko’s case in the Russian Donetsk court, presiding judge Leonid Stepanenko warned those present about their behavior.
“Everybody must know how to behave themselves,” the judge said, according to the independent Novaya Gazeta. People in the court room are not allowed to nod, he added. Nodding, apparently, may “distract the court from justice.”
Good morning. We'll start the live blog today with this update from our news desk:
Representatives of Russia, Ukraine, and Europe reached a long-awaited agreement on the withdrawal of tanks and other weapons from the frontline in eastern Ukraine.
"This is a document that opens a path to peace, a path to an end of violence and attacks," Russian negotiator Azamat Kulmukhametov said late on September 29.
The deal supplements a broad agreement signed in February aimed at ending the conflict between the Western-aligned Ukrainian government and Russian-backed rebels in the east.
Martin Sajdik, the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe's (OSCE) representative at the peace talks, said the agreement will start in two days and take 39 days to carry out.
It covers "the withdrawal of tanks, mortars and artillery of less than 100-millimeter caliber to a distance of 15 kilometers," he said.
He said Ukrainian envoy Leonid Kuchma has signed the deal, while separatist representative Denis Pushilin said the leaders of the self-styled Donetsk and Luhansk "people's republics," who were not present at talks, would sign the agreement by October 1.
The OSCE will monitor the withdrawal of the weapons, Sajdik said.
Weapons of over 100-millimeter caliber have already been withdrawn from the front line in accordance with the cease-fire deal brokered in Minsk in February.
The leaders of Russia, Ukraine, France, and Germany, who negotiated the Minsk deal, are meeting in Paris on September 30 to try to push forward a political settlement for eastern Ukraine, where the fighting has killed more than 7,900 people since it began in April 2014.
The cease-fire declared as part of the February agreement was regularly violated by both sides until they declared a new truce on September 1, which has largely held.
(AP, Reuters)