Ukraine to create safe routes for people fleeing east's strife

A pro-Russian fighter from a group that calls itself "Russian Orthodox Army"  poses for photo in Donetsk, eastern Ukraine, Tuesday, June 10, 2014. Ukraine's new president on Tuesday ordered security officials to create a corridor for safe passage for civilians in eastern regions rocked by a pro-Russian insurgency, as he began to form his government team by tapping a media mogul as chief of staff.
A pro-Russian fighter from a group that calls itself "Russian Orthodox Army" poses for photo in Donetsk, eastern Ukraine, Tuesday, June 10, 2014. Ukraine's new president on Tuesday ordered security officials to create a corridor for safe passage for civilians in eastern regions rocked by a pro-Russian insurgency, as he began to form his government team by tapping a media mogul as chief of staff.

KIEV, Ukraine -- Ukraine's new president on Tuesday ordered security officials to create a safe-passage corridor for civilians in eastern regions rocked by a pro-Russian insurgency, as he began to form his government team by tapping a media mogul as chief of staff.

Petro Poroshenko ordered security agencies to organize transport and relocation services to help civilians leave areas affected by fighting between rebels and Ukraine's military, his office said in a brief statement published online. It gave no details on where the civilians could be relocated or what accommodation was available.

Ukraine's Interior Ministry later elaborated that civilians who wanted to leave the area of fighting could do so through government checkpoints, where they would be provided with documents allowing access to pensions, other social payments, health care and education. They would be able to move to any other region of Ukraine where authorities could provide temporary accommodation, the ministry said in a statement.

It said a special center is to be created under the Emergency Situations Ministry to help coordinate assistance to those who flee the fighting.

Poroshenko also announced the appointments of media executive and business ally Boris Lozhkin as chief of staff, and Svyatoslav Tsegolka, a journalist at the TV station owned by Poroshenko, as press secretary. Lozhkin, who sold his major news holding last year, has never been publicly involved in politics. He hails from the country's eastern city of Kharkiv.

The new president did not announce any shake-up in the defense or foreign ministries, where changes could be pivotal for Ukraine's ongoing offensive in the east. Ukrainian officials have said at least 200 people, including 59 servicemen, have been killed in clashes in the east.

It is unclear how many civilians have fled the fighting. The United Nations' refugee agency in May said Ukraine's tensions had resulted in about 10,000 displaced people, both from Russia's annexation of Crimea and from the violence in the east.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov on Tuesday said some 30,000 Ukrainian refugees are now in Russia's Rostov region, which borders Ukraine.

Lavrov, after meeting with his German and Polish counterparts in St. Petersburg, said the announcement on establishing safe passage was "a step in the right direction," but he criticized Ukraine for continuing the offensive.

"The key to toning down the situation in our view is ending this military operation against protesters. Then, I am convinced, these people who you call separatists will take reciprocal action," he said.

The government in Kiev calls the security sweep an "anti-terrorist operation." Russian officials deny allegations by Kiev and Western countries that Russia is fomenting or supporting the uprising in the east and say it is uncertain how much influence Moscow can exert on the insurgents.

Poroshenko's statement gave no indication that he was planning to wind down the government's operation against the rebels, who have continued to seize administrative buildings, police stations, border posts and garrisons across the region.

At his inauguration Saturday, Poroshenko said he would grant amnesty to any insurgents who laid down their arms and had not been involved in bloodshed, and he encouraged the creation of a safe corridor for rebels to go to Russia. He ruled out negotiations with any "gangsters and killers" among them.

U.S. Assistant Secretary of State Victoria Nuland, who spoke to journalists briefly in Kiev on Tuesday, praised Poroshenko's plan to resolve the conflict and promised that $48 million pledged by Vice President Joe Biden to Kiev on Sunday would be used "in eastern Ukraine in conjunction with the president's peace plan."

Information for this article was contributed by Jim Heintz of The Associated Press.

A Section on 06/11/2014

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