Kerry to meet Russia 's Lavrov for Ukraine
talks in Paris
on Sunday
• Top diplomats discuss Ukraine
and agree to meet in Paris
• Vladimir Putin calls Barack Obama late Friday
Guardian
staff and agencies
theguardian.com,
Saturday 29 March 2014 / http://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/mar/29/ukraine-kerry-calls-lavrov-russia-us-talks
Halfway
home from Saudi Arabia , US
secretary of state John Kerry has abruptly changed course. He will now stay in
Europe for talks on Ukraine .
The news
followed reports from Russia
that Kerry had spoken to the Russian foreign minister, Sergey Lavrov, by phone,
a day after President Vladimir Putin called President Barack Obama. The Russian
foreign ministry said Washington had initiated
the call between Kerry and Lavrov, adding that they discussed Ukraine and
plans for further contact.
Flying from
Riyadh to Ireland for a refuelling stop,
Kerry decided to turn around after speaking to Lavrov from the plane. State
Department spokeswoman Jennifer Psaki confirmed on Saturday that Kerry had
arrived in Paris
and that the meeting would be held on Sunday.
Kerry had
been due to return to Europe on Tuesday for a
Nato foreign ministers meeting. The secretary of state was in Riyadh ,
as well as Rome and the
Hague , with Obama this week, but was traveling on his own,
including a side trip to Jordan
to work on salvaging foundering Middle East peace talks while Obama visited Brussels .
Psaki said
Kerry would remain in close touch with Martin Indyk, the US ambassador to
Israel, and the negotiating team in Jerusalem and Ramallah, West Bank, in case
he needed to return to the region from Paris before the Nato meeting.
Obama left
for Washington
Saturday with much left unresolved, but officials said he made progress during
his trip to Saudi King Abdullah's desert oasis, as well as with European
leaders. The president's advisers were particularly bullish about his meeting
in the Netherlands with G7
allies, which agreed to indefinitely suspend Russia from the larger G8.
"There's
been a lot of movement in the last several days that suggest that Europe has
been stirred to action by the events in Ukraine, and I think the president felt
a degree of unity in that G7 meeting, in the EU session at Nato, and then with
the individual leaders that he met with," said Ben Rhodes, Obama's deputy
national security adviser.
On Friday,
the White House provided a readout of the call between Obama and Putin which
read: “President Putin called President Obama today to discuss the US proposal
for a diplomatic resolution to the crisis in Ukraine, which Secretary Kerry had
again presented to Foreign Minister Lavrov at the meeting at the Hague earlier
this week … the presidents agreed that Kerry and Lavrov would meet to discuss
next steps.
“President
Obama noted that the Ukrainian government continues to take a restrained and
de-escalatory approach to the crisis and is moving ahead with constitutional
reform and democratic elections, and urged Russia
to support this process and avoid further provocations, including the buildup
of forces on its border with Ukraine .
“President
Obama underscored to President Putin that the United
States continues to support a diplomatic path in close
consultation with the government of Ukraine and in support of the
Ukrainian people with the aim of de-escalation of the crisis. President Obama
made clear that this remains possible only if Russia
pulls back its troops and does not take any steps to further violate Ukraine ’s
territorial integrity and sovereignty.
On
Saturday, Russia said it had
"no intention" of invading eastern Ukraine ,
responding to western warnings over a military buildup on the border following Moscow 's annexation of the
Crimean peninsula. Lavrov, speaking on Russian television, reinforced a message
from Putin that Russia would
settle – at least for now – for control over Crimea despite massing thousands
of troops near Ukraine 's
eastern border. "We have absolutely no intention of – or interest in –
crossing Ukraine 's
borders," Lavrov said.
He added,
however, that Russia was
ready to protect the rights of Russian speakers, referring to what Moscow sees as threats to the lives of compatriots in
eastern Ukraine
since Moscow-backed Viktor Yanukovich was deposed as president in February.
Western
powers imposed sanctions on Russia ,
including visa bans for some of Putin's inner circle, after Moscow
annexed Crimea this month following a referendum, deemed illegal by western
nations, on union of the Russian-majority region with the Russia . The
west has threatened tougher sanctions targeting Russia 's
stuttering economy if Moscow sends more troops
to Ukraine .
Nato
secretary general Anders Fogh Rasmussen, in an interview with Germany 's Focus
magazine, said the alliance was "extremely worried", adding: "I
fear that it is not yet enough for him [Putin]. I am worried that we are not
dealing with rational thinking as much as with emotions, the yearning to
rebuild Russia 's
old sphere of influence in its immediate neighbourhood."
Putin's call to Obama, however, may be a
sign that the Russian leader is ready to reduce tension in the worst east-west
standoff since the Cold War. The Kremlin said Putin had suggested “examining
possible steps the global community can take to help stabilise the situation”.
Ousted president Yanukovich called on
Friday for each of the country's regions to hold a referendum on their status
within Ukraine ,
instead of the presidential election planned for 25 May.
That election is shaping up as a context
between former prime minister Yulia Tymoshenko and the billionaire Petro
"the Chocolate King" Poroshenko, after boxer-turned-politician Vitaly
Klitschko withdrew on Saturday. Klitschko said he would support Poroshenko.
Lavrov called for "deep constitutional
reform" in Ukraine ,
a sprawling country of 46 million people. "Frankly, we don't see any other
way for the steady development of the Ukrainian state apart from as a
federation," Lavrov said. Each region, he said, would have jurisdiction
over its economy, finances, culture, language, education and "external
economic and cultural connections with neighbouring countries or regions".
There was also a bid for regional
devolution within Crimea . Its Tatar community,
an indigenous minority who were persecuted under Soviet rule and largely
boycotted last month's referendum on joining Russia, want autonomy on the Black
Sea peninsula, the Tatar leader said on Saturday.
The Associated Press and Reuters
contributed to this report
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