Six dead in shelling at Ukraine rebel city

Shelling has killed six people and wounded 15 others in the Ukraine rebel stronghold of Donetsk, the city council said.

Six dead in shelling at Ukraine rebel city

Shelling has killed six people and wounded 15 others in the Ukraine rebel stronghold of Donetsk, the city council said.

It is the worst reported violence since a ceasefire between Russian-backed rebels and Ukrainian troops took effect on September 5.

Fighting around the eastern city’s government-held airport has left its northern neighbourhoods in the crossfire.

Two northern districts were shelled heavily on Sunday, leading to the casualties and damaging both homes and offices, the city council said.

Loud blasts could be heard from the direction of the airport all day yesterday, and gunfire intermittently rang out in the city centre in the afternoon.

The Ukrainian government blamed the militants for the civilian casualties.

“Neither today, nor yesterday, nor in the previous days did Ukrainian forces shell any residential areas,” said Colonel Andriy Lysenko, spokesman for the Ukrainian national security and defence council.

Both the rebel and government sides have said they are rearming in case the fighting starts anew.

Ukraine and the West have repeatedly claimed that Russia is fuelling the separatist uprising with manpower, weapons and expertise, something that Moscow denies.

Nato Secretary-General Anders Fogh Rasmussen said “around 1,000” Russian soldiers remain in Ukraine.

“While the Russians may have withdrawn some of their troops in Ukraine, there is a still Russian military presence within Ukraine,” he said, adding that several thousand Russian soldiers were also along the border with Ukraine.

Russian President Vladimir Putin and German Chancellor Angela Merkel in a phone conversation on yesterday both stressed the importance of observing the ceasefire, the Kremlin said.

Mrs Merkel said she had told Mr Putin that Russia must withdraw its troops from Ukraine for the peace plan to work.

She said the complete withdrawal must accompany a securing of the Russian-Ukrainian border to prevent fighters and arms from flowing to pro-Russian separatists in eastern Ukraine.

The ceasefire deal has brought some benefits. Another 73 Ukrainian soldiers were freed on Sunday in exchange for 73 rebels – the largest prisoner exchange so far.

And in neighbourhoods away from the Donetsk airport, many more people and cars were out in the streets than have been for weeks.

In Moscow, Russian Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev criticised the West for “testing Russia’s strength” with sanctions but insisted that Russia’s response to them will not curtail the country’s democratic development.

“It is important not to succumb to the temptations of so-called easy solutions but, instead, preserve and advance the development of democratic processes in our society,” he said.

The US and the EU last week imposed a new round of sanctions on Russia for its actions in Ukraine.

Russian officials say this shows the West is ignoring Moscow’s peace-making efforts and the ceasefire deal.

The fighting in eastern Ukraine began in mid-April, a month after Russia annexed the Black Sea peninsula of Crimea. It has claimed at least 3,000 civilian lives, according to the UN.

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