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Ten-year-old Sasha stands in a bomb shelter in Donetsk in eastern Ukraine.
Ten-year-old Sasha stands in a bomb shelter in Donetsk in eastern Ukraine.

Live Blog: Ukraine In Crisis (Archive)

Follow all of the latest developments as they happen.

Final News Summary For September 29

-- We have started a new Ukraine Live Blog. Find it here.

-- Ukraine is marking 75 years since the World War II massacre of 33,771 Jews on the outskirts of Nazi-occupied Kyiv.

-- German Chancellor Angela Merkel has urged Russian President Vladimir Putin to stabilize a fragile cease-fire in Ukraine and do all he could to improve what Merkel called a "catastrophic humanitarian situation" in Syria.

-- Russia's Supreme Court has upheld a decision by a Moscow-backed Crimean court to ban the Mejlis, the self-governing body of Crimean Tatars in the occupied Ukrainian territory.

* NOTE: Times are stated according to local time in Kyiv (GMT/UTC +3)

10:01 16.2.2016

10:00 16.2.2016

09:59 16.2.2016

09:56 16.2.2016

08:45 16.2.2016

07:38 16.2.2016

07:35 16.2.2016

21:57 15.2.2016

This ends our live blogging for February 15. Be sure to check back tomorrow for our continuing coverage.

21:56 15.2.2016

Here is today's map of the security situation in eastern Ukraine, according to the Defense Ministry (click to enlarge):

20:10 15.2.2016

Ukraine to push for cabinet revamp as another reformer quits, Bloomberg reports:

The political crisis roiling Ukraine’s post-revolution leaders is coming to a head after the International Monetary Fund threatened to cut off aid and another top reformer quit. If efforts to revamp the cabinet fail, the risk is early elections.

Prime Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk is set to report to parliament this week on government performance, with proposed personnel changes to follow. While President Petro Poroshenko has vowed to “reboot” the cabinet and jump-start reforms, two small coalition parties want the premier to step down and one has called for a snap ballot. Adding to friction, a senior Ukrainian prosecutor resigned Monday, accusing his boss of graft. His exit follows that of the economy minister this month amid similar accusations.

Poroshenko and his team were brought to power after a popular uprising with a mission to bring European levels of transparency to the former Soviet republic after decades of misrule. While much of their two years in office was spent tackling a recession and a pro-Russian insurgency that’s killed 9,000 people, voters and Ukraine’s foreign backers are fed up with delays in fighting corruption. The hryvnia has lost 10.5 percent this year.

“I don’t think the reshuffle is enough,” Lutz Roehmeyer, director of fund management at Landesbank Berlin GmbH, said by e-mail. “Early elections are unfortunately still possible. Foreign investors thought that this is the one and only chance to reform the country but now it seems that Ukraine falls back into old political behavior.”

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