Ukrainian forces start to quit besieged town

19 Feb 2015 / 00:05 H.

KIEV: Some Ukrainian forces began to pull out of a town under siege by Russian-backed separatists today as renewed fighting threatened to wreck an international deal aimed at ending the conflict.
Rebel forces, who the pro-Western government in Kiev say are supported and armed by Moscow, fought their way into the eastern Ukrainian town of Debaltseve on Tuesday, ignoring a ceasefire which came into effect on Sunday.
Rebels say the truce, negotiated by Ukraine, Russia, Germany and France at a summit in Belarus last week, does not apply to Debaltseve, a railway and transport hub which links the two rebel-controlled regions of eastern Ukraine.
Pro-government commanders said some forces had pulled out but there were reports of continued fighting in the town.
"The withdrawal of forces from Debaltseve is taking place in a planned and organised way," said Semen Semenchenko, who heads the Donbass paramilitary battalion.
"The enemy is trying to cut the roads and prevent the exit of the troops," he said on Facebook.
Another pro-government paramilitary leader, Mykola Kolesnyk, told a television channel that not all troops were pulling out.
"We are talking only about units which are surrounded in populated areas in and around the town," he said.
A senior Ukrainian police official said fighting was going on in the town. The Ukrainian Defence Ministry, in an early morning statement, also reported fighting there.
News of the withdrawal immediately affected financial markets, with the cost of insuring exposure to Ukrainian debt and the spreads of the country's dollar bonds over safe haven US treasury bills soaring to record highs.
Russian President Vladimir Putin, whom Kiev and Western countries accuse of directing the rebels' tank and artillery assault on the town, said on Tuesday that the Ukrainian government should let its soldiers surrender.
Even before the Ukrainian troops were forced to pull back, last week's peace deal had all but collapsed, with both sides failing to pull back heavy guns as required after the rebels refused to halt their advance.
Putin said Kiev should allow its soldiers to surrender to the advancing rebels.
"I hope that the responsible figures in the Ukrainian leadership will not hinder soldiers in the Ukrainian army from putting down their weapons," Putin said during a visit to Turkey.
He hoped the rebels would allow the Ukrainians to return to their families, once they had surrendered the town.
Reuters journalists near the snowbound front line on Tuesday said artillery rounds were rocking Debaltseve every five seconds as Grad rockets pounded the town. – Reuters

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