person:andrey purgin

  • After months of deadlock, some progress made on Minsk II peace accords
    http://www.kyivpost.com/content/ukraine/after-months-of-deadlock-some-progress-made-on-minsk-ii-peace-accords-3975

    Adding intrigue to the mix were reports of a “coup” in the separatist-controlled part of Donetsk Oblast, in which the hardline separatist leader Andrey Purgin was replaced as speaker of the area’s pseudo parliament by the reputedly more pragmatic Denis Pushilin.

    Commenting on the move on the Euromaidan Press website on Sept. 5, Russian journalist Kirill Mikhailov speculated that Purgin’s ouster might indicate that the Kremlin is seeking to end the deadlock over the Minsk peace process by removing from its proxy authorities in Donetsk those leaders who oppose the deal.

    Reacting to the controversial Ukrainian constitutional amendments providing for the Donbas’s special governance as per the Minsk agreement, Purgin outright rejected them, while Pushilin talked of dialogue with Kyiv over local elections (which are also part of Minsk agreement, that Pushilin, being part of the peace talks, may have actually read),” Mikhailov wrote.

    In a further indication that separatist leaders might be softening their stance on implementing the Minsk accords, another separatist leader, Alexander Zakharchenko, said on Sept. 5 that “there is no alternative to the Minsk agreements.

    That was a marked change in rhetoric from Zakharchenko, who has previously said the Minsk agreements should be considered canceled.

  • Power struggle’ in Donetsk prompts flurry of speculation in Kyiv and beyond
    http://www.kyivpost.com/content/ukraine/power-struggle-in-donetsk-prompts-flurry-of-speculation-in-kyiv-and-beyond

    An apparent power struggle among Russia’s proxy authorities in separatist-controlled parts of Ukraine’s Donetsk Oblast has left experts speculating about its causes, and what the Kremlin’s future intentions for the region now might be.

    Reports came on the evening of Sept. 4 that Denis Pushilin, the vice-speaker of the pseudo parliament in the part of Donetsk Oblast controlled by Russian-backed separatists, had ousted the body’s speaker, Andrey Purgin at an extraordinary meeting of the so-called “People’s Council,” and taken the role of speaker for himself.

    The Kremlin-controlled information mouthpiece Sputnik said an anonymous source had told it Pushilin was now the interim head of the body. The Kremlin-controlled TASS information agency said that deputies in the pseudo parliament had voted for the move by a narrow margin of 73 for, to 70 against.

    Explaining the ouster of Purgin, Pushilin said the former had tried “to disrupt (the Sept. 4) meeting of the People’s Council, when the deputies had to listen to false declarations made with the aim of increasing tensions and destabilizing the situation,”the separatist Donetsk News Agency information source reported. In his first decision as a newly appointed head of the people’s council, Pushilin dismissed the chief of staff of the People’s Council,” Aleksey Aleksandrov, who is a close ally of Purgin.

    La suite de l’article donne la parole aux inévitables « experts » qui y voient évidemment le renforcement de la mainmise de Moscou…

    Alors que la trêve de la rentrée des classes tient bon, ce qui ne doit pas plaire aux va-t-en-guerre, ce qui précède donnerait plutôt à penser à une remise au pas des agités. Du moins, de ce côté-là de la ligne de front…

  • ITAR-TASS: World - Contact Group on Ukraine meeting in Minsk
    http://en.itar-tass.com/world/750396

    A meeting of the Contact Group on the Ukrainian crisis settlement has started in Belarusian capital Minsk.

    Like last time on September 5, the talks involve former Ukrainian president and the current president’s special envoy Leonid Kuchma, Prime Minister of the self-proclaimed Donetsk People’s Republic (DPR) Alexander Zakharchenko, head of the self-proclaimed Luhansk People’s Republic (LPR) Igor Plotnitsky.

    First deputy DPR premier Andrey Purgin, LPR Supreme Council chairman Alexey Karyakin, Russia’ s ambassador to Kiev Mikhail Zurabov and Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) Ambassador Heidi Tagliavini are also taking part.
    According to Kuchma, the Trilateral Contact Group comprising Russia, Ukraine and the OSCE will consider a memorandum whose first point is how to stop hostilities in Ukraine’s embattled southeast.
    He expressed hope for progress and added that the issue of the OSCE’s role in strengthening the security regime on the Russian-Ukrainian border was also on the agenda. Besides, Kuchma said, the OSCE should take under its control “the situation with the zone that will have a local self-government”.

    Karyakin confirmed to ITAR-TASS earlier today that the meeting’s key goal will be to negotiate issues of strengthening the ceasefire regime.

    • Ukraine : les négociations de paix reprennent à Minsk
      http://www.lemonde.fr/europe/article/2014/09/19/ukraine-les-negociations-de-paix-reprennent-a-minsk_4491114_3214.html

      Des représentants du gouvernement ukrainien et des séparatistes prorusses se sont réunis vendredi 19 septembre à Minsk (Biélorussie) pour commencer de nouvelles négociations de paix, en présence d’un représentant de l’Organisation pour la sécurité et la coopération en Europe (OSCE) et de l’ambassadeur de Russie à Kiev, Mikhaïl Zourabov. C’est la troisième fois que le groupe de contact se retrouve à Minsk.
      L’ancien président ukrainien Léonid Koutchma, qui représente Kiev, a déclaré à la presse « espérer que cette réunion permette d’aller de l’avant », soulignant la nécessité de « parvenir à un cessez-le-feu », l’accord en ce sens signé le 5 septembre étant violé à peu près quotidiennement sur le terrain. Il a précisé que les négociations ne se feraient « en aucun cas au détriment de l’intégrité territoriale de l’Ukraine ».

      Le « premier ministre » de la « République de Donetsk » unilatéralement proclamée, Alexandre Zakhartchenko, a de son côté dit espérer « signer un document qui reflète notre position concernant le “statut spécial” » proposé par Kiev aux régions sous contrôle rebelle. Un autre chef séparatiste, Andreï Pourguine, avait auparavant affirmé que la réunion porterait en priorité sur ce « statut spécial ».

       
       
      Jusqu’à présent, cette proposition de Kiev d’un « statut spécial », saluée par Moscou, a été rejetée par les rebelles qui revendiquent l’indépendance des territoires conquis.