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Russia says Kiev’s refusal to negotiate with rebels ‘alarming’

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov on Friday said Ukraine's perceived failure to agree with rebels on implementing a peace deal was "alarming" and urged the West to pressure Kiev. "The situation is alarming because we're witnessing a tendency, if you will," Russia's top diplomat told reporters. "Starting with a state coup, the current Kiev authorities…

Sergei LavrovRussian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov on Friday said Ukraine’s perceived failure to agree with rebels on implementing a peace deal was “alarming” and urged the West to pressure Kiev.

“The situation is alarming because we’re witnessing a tendency, if you will,” Russia’s top diplomat told reporters.

“Starting with a state coup, the current Kiev authorities have routinely demonstrated their inability to come to an agreement,” Lavrov said after talks with his counterpart from Luxembourg, Jean Asselborn.

Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko’s proposed constitutional changes have triggered a surge in tensions between Kiev and Moscow-backed rebels that have been battling government forces since April 2014.

Lavrov said Russia was especially concerned that, in its view, the draft constitution did not honour a “single requirement” of a peace deal brokered by Germany and France in the Belarussian capital Minsk in February.

“Russia is deeply concerned by Kiev’s inability or unwillingness to implement a requirement to agree with Donetsk and Lugansk on the ways of implementing local elections and involving representatives in work on the new constitution,” Lavrov said.

He added that the Kiev authorities were “torpedoing” the peace agreement and refusing to directly negotiate with rebels, urging the West to pressure Ukrainian authorities to honour the deal.

State Duma speaker Sergei Naryshkin struck a similar note, accusing the West of paying lip service to resolving the crisis.

“Together with the Kiev authorities, the West only mimicks the constitutional process in Ukraine, and this only deepens Ukraine’s humanitarian crisis,” he said in parliament.

Adding to the tensions was Kiev’s announcement that it was suspending purchases of Russian natural gas supplies after EU-mediated talks in Vienna broke down earlier this week.

Russia retaliated by halting all gas supplies to Kiev on Wednesday.

In a further twist, rebels announced plans to hold local elections in October with a view to cementing the separatists’ semi-autonomous status within a united Ukraine, sparking criticism in Kiev.

Kiev and the West accuse Moscow of backing the Russian-speaking rebels with weapons, money and troops.

More than 6,500 people have been killed in the fighting since April 2014, according to the United Nations.

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