German Chancellor Angela Merkel told Russian President Vladimir Putin on Saturday that a four-way summit to discuss the situation in eastern Ukraine would not take place until there was real progress on the Minsk peace plan.
German government spokesman Steffen Seibert said in a statement after the phone call between the leaders that Merkel welcomed Russian efforts to find a solution to the crisis.
Putin underlined the need to observe a ceasefire and “to support the economic recovery of the affected regions in southeastern Ukraine,” the Kremlin said in a statement.
It said both sides confirmed their intention to promote a peaceful settlement in Ukraine.
However, the chancellor told Putin that a summit by leaders from France, Germany, Russia and Ukraine in Kazakhstan’s capital Astana or another city could not be confirmed at this stage, Seibert said.
Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko has invited the leaders of Russia, France and Germany to talks in Astana on Jan. 15 in an attempt to restore peace.
But Germany and France have already raised doubts about whether such a four-way summit can take place without further progress on the peace plan which was agreed in the Belarussian capital Minsk in September.
In a separate phone call, Merkel discussed the situation in Ukraine also with Poroshenko, the spokesman said.
A four-way summit would only make sense if there was a substantial improvement on important points like a ceasefire and a demarcation line between the Ukraine-Russia border, Merkel told Poroshenko, according to the statement.


