Despite Russia-Ukraine cease-fire, fighting in Donetsk leaves 12 dead

Eastern Ukraine has suffered the worst violence in more than a week as fighting between pro-Russian rebels and government troops in the region killed at least 12 people and wounded 32 others, officials said Monday. Col. Andriy Lysenko told journalists in a briefing in Kiev on Monday that at least nine troops had been killed in a day and 27 had been wounded. Meanwhile, the city council of Donetsk said in a statement published online that at least three civilians were killed and five wounded in overnight shelling of a residential area in the northern part of the city, where fighting has centered on the government-held airport.

There is no protection of the border along the entire Luhansk and Donetsk region—no control, no buffer zones, and all of that is the minimum condition for us to be able to consider revoking sanctions. Unfortunately, we are a very long way away from that.

Angela Merkel, German chancellor

Throughout the day in Donetsk, regular explosions could be heard coming from the north of the city. Violence has continued despite a cease-fire declared on Sept. 5. Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko has been at pains to insist to a sceptical audience at home that his peace plan is working and said last week that he believed “the most dangerous part of the war” is over. Since fighting began in April, the conflict has claimed at least 3,500 lives. German Chancellor Angela Merkel in Berlin said that the situation in east Ukraine was “anything but satisfactory.” “The elementary question of the cease-fire is not yet cleared up, still less the future status and cooperation between the Luhansk and Donetsk regions and the Ukrainian central government,” Merkel said. The EU imposed several rounds of sanctions on Russian companies and individuals for their roles in the east Ukraine conflict. Kiev and the West have repeatedly asserted that Moscow has fuelled the separatist insurgency by providing it with arms and personnel, something Russia denies. On Sunday, in the second-largest Ukrainian city, Kharkiv, nationalists tore down an enormous statue of Vladimir Lenin to cheers from the crowd.