February 9, 2017 (Reuters) Germany hopes to
hold a meeting with Russia, Ukraine and France on the Ukraine crisis at a
gathering of G20 foreign ministers in Bonn next week, a foreign ministry
spokesman said on Wednesday. "We are conducting talks ... with our
partners in Paris, Moscow, Kiev about the usefulness, political usefulness and
logistical feasibility of such a meeting," spokesman Martin Schaefer said.
He said that Foreign Minister Sigmar Gabriel wanted to organise a meeting of
the four foreign ministers soon to give new impetus to the implementation of
the Minsk ceasefire agreement.
Tanks are seen near the government-held town of
Bakhmut, Ukraine, February 7,
German Chancellor Angela Merkel on Tuesday
urged Russian President Vladimir Putin to use his influence on separatists in
eastern Ukraine to stop the violence there. Ukrainian forces and pro-Russian
separatists have both blamed each other for the latest flare-up in a conflict
that has killed 10,000 people since April 2014. Schaefer downplayed growing
controversy about an interview given by German ambassador Ernst Reichel to a
Ukrainian publication in which he said that elections were possible in eastern
Ukraine despite the Russian presence in the region and Kiev's intent to
"raise Ukrainian flags at each city council." He said Reichel's
comments did not mark a departure from the German government's views or the
Minsk peace process, which maps out a process for restoring Ukraine's
sovereignty over its full territory after a series of other steps, including
elections. Schaefer also said the German government deeply regretted an
incident in which a Ukrainian lawmaker "smeared" a piece of the
Berlin wall at the German embassy in Kiev in protest over the ambassador's
remarks, saying it was "inappropriate behaviour". He said Germany was
the first country to recognise Ukraine after its independence and remained a
steadfast supporter of Ukrainian reforms.
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