Putin welcomes Ukraine ceasefire

Russia’s President Vladimir Putin said on Saturday it was welcome that fighting had stopped in eastern Ukraine, a change in rhetoric compared to his previous accusations against Ukraine for violating a ceasefire.

Until recently Putin has repeatedly criticised Ukraine for failing to implement a peace deal agreed in February, including by continued shelling of rebel-held areas.

“It’s heartening that the main thing is the cessation of shelling of the Donbass (eastern Ukraine) from the side of the armed forces as well as the so-called volunteer battalions of Ukraine,” he said in the Crimean town of Chersoneus.

“I think that today this is the main achievement.”

Putin was on the latest of several visits to Crimea, again putting Russia’s stamp on the region it annexed from Ukraine last year during political upheaval in that country.

Both Ukrainian and rebel forces have blamed each other for repeated ceasefire breaches but both sides are now broadly respecting a new ceasefire that came into effect on September 1, according to international monitors from the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe.

Putin also reiterated his call for Ukraine to implement other elements of February’s peace deal, including that Kiev hold direct talks with rebel representatives, and implements laws on amnesty for the rebels and on an autonomous status for the rebel regions.