Both sides in the conflict in Ukraine could pull back weapons under 100mm calibre from the front line in a bid to boost confidence in a ceasefire, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said yesterday.
Lavrov said there was a common aim for a ceasefire in the Donetsk and Luhansk regions agreed in Minsk in February to hold indefinitely, although there have been some violations.
Lavrov said parties involved in the conflict as well as the Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe were discussing what could be done on the top of the Minsk agreement which, among other measures, involved the pullback of weapons with calibre over 100mm, including large artillery, heavy mortar and powerful rocket systems.
There was a common aim for a ceasefire
“It is necessary to monitor keeping mainly the military part of the Minsk agreements... There is a possibility to pull back troops with calibre under 100mm,” Lavrov said.
“We will try to help the sides to reach such an agreement, which would increase mutual confidence,” Lavrov told a news conference during a visit to Slovakia.
His remarks echoed comments by a Kiev official that weapons not covered by the Minsk agreements, such as tanks and 80mm mortar and other weapons of up to 100mm calibre may be pulled back. He criticised a Ukrainian law on the status of eastern Ukraine which he said went in the opposite direction than the Minsk ceasefire agreements.
Ukraine’s Parliament voted to offer limited self-rule to pro-Russian rebels in the east. But Kiev’s insistence that the law should come into force only when elections are held in the eastern territories under Ukrainian jurisdiction drew criticism from Russia.