Ukrainian rebels ‘agree to further peace talks’

Poroshenko says progress needed if ceasefire, ending tomorrow, is to be extended

Ukrainian separatist rebels have agreed to take part in further peace talks tomorrow to end the conflict in Ukraine’s eastern regions. Ukrainian president Petro Poroshenko  hinted heavily that there would be no extension of a government ceasefire, which officially ends at 10pm tomorrow. Photograph: Gaetan Michel/EPA.
Ukrainian separatist rebels have agreed to take part in further peace talks tomorrow to end the conflict in Ukraine’s eastern regions. Ukrainian president Petro Poroshenko hinted heavily that there would be no extension of a government ceasefire, which officially ends at 10pm tomorrow. Photograph: Gaetan Michel/EPA.

Ukrainian separatist rebels have agreed to take part in further peace talks tomorrow to end the conflict in Ukraine’s eastern regions, Interfax news agency said.

"There is an agreement to hold a round of consultations on June 27th in Donetsk," Andrei Purgin, a senior figure in the leadership of the self-proclaimed Donetsk People's Republic, was quoted as saying.

Earlier, speaking in Strasbourg, France, Ukrainian president Petro Poroshenko said he had just heard of the rebels' readiness to meet again with the so-called "contact group" which includes former Ukrainian president Leonid Kuchma, Moscow's envoy to Kiev and a high-ranking official from the OSCE security and rights watchdog.

But Ukrainian media quoted him as hinting heavily that there would be no extension of a government ceasefire, which officially ends at 10pm tomorrow, unless Kiev was satisfied with the results of the talks.

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“It (Friday) is a very important day: if our conditions for the peace plan are not accepted, then we will make a very important decision,” Mr Poroshenko said.

Mr Poroshenko, who was speaking at the Council of Europe today and will sign a landmark free trade agreement with the European Union in Brussels tomorrow, has offered rebel fighters an amnesty and safe conduct out of the country if they lay down their arms and cease hostilities.

He is also offering to people in the mainly Russian-speaking east broader Russian-language rights and will next week present a decentralisation plan aimed at allowing the regions more control over their own finances and affairs.

Reuters