A military operation in eastern Ukraine will continue until protesters are fully disarmed, the representative of the Ukrainian Foreign Ministry, Andrei Deshchytsa said today in his comment on the results of the quadripartite meeting in Geneva.
The deputities of the Verkhovna Rada have been heaving heated debates about the Geneva talks and could not agree on how to resolve the crisis in the east of Ukraine.
The communist party believes that the document is full of unspecific phrases and that thee is nothing written about disarming radicals in Kiev.
It seems that the Ukrainian authorities believe that only people in the East should be disarmed and not people in the West, which contradicts the Geneva accords.
The head of the Center for Applied Political Studies "Penta," Vladimir Fesenko told Vestnik Kavkaza that the Geneva Declaration is correct in its content. The question is how it will be implemented.
Political analyst Alexei Voronenko agrees with him in this respect. "The results of yesterday's talks could be called productive," he said, adding that now the Ukrainian authorities have to make them happen.
According to a Ukrainian political scientist, Igor Gridasov, the Geneva talks allowed to outline the first steps to de-escalate the conflict.Ukrainian Geneva: declaration and realities
A military operation in eastern Ukraine will continue until protesters are fully disarmed, the representative of the Ukrainian Foreign Ministry, Andrei Deshchytsa said today in his comment on the results of the quadripartite meeting in Geneva.
The deputities of the Verkhovna Rada have been heaving heated debates about the Geneva talks and could not agree on how to resolve the crisis in the east of Ukraine.
The communist party believes that the document is full of unspecific phrases and that thee is nothing written about disarming radicals in Kiev.
It seems that the Ukrainian authorities believe that only people in the East should be disarmed and not people in the West, which contradicts the Geneva accords.
The head of the Center for Applied Political Studies "Penta," Vladimir Fesenko told Vestnik Kavkaza that the Geneva Declaration is correct in its content. The question is how it will be implemented.
Political analyst Alexei Voronenko agrees with him in this respect. "The results of yesterday's talks could be called productive," he said, adding that now the Ukrainian authorities have to make them happen.
According to a Ukrainian political scientist, Igor Gridasov, the Geneva talks allowed to outline the first steps to de-escalate the conflict.