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Ukraine says 500 pro-Russia rebels attack convoy, 20 killed

Pro-Russian armed militants stand guard at a barricade which faces a position manned by Ukrainian army soldiers, near the eastern Ukrainian city of Slavyansk, Donetsk region, on May 23, 2014. VIKTOR DRACHEV/AFP/Getty Images

ST. PETERSBURG, Russia – Russia will recognize the outcome of Ukraine’s presidential vote this weekend, President Vladimir Putin promised Friday, voicing hope that Ukraine’s new leader would halt the military operation against separatists in the east.

But clashes between pro-Russia separatists and government forces appeared to be heating up, leaving 20 more rebels and one solider dead, Ukraine’s Defence Ministry reported Friday.

Up to 500 insurgents attacked a convoy of government troops in a clash that lasted for several hours Thursday and killed 20 rebels outside the eastern village of Rubizhne, the ministry said. It also said one soldier was killed early Friday near the same area after insurgents ambushed Ukrainian troops in a separate clash.

READ MORE: 13 Ukrainian soldiers dead in Donetsk clashes

These claims from the Luhansk region – which has declared independence from Kyiv – could not be independently confirmed. It was also not immediately clear why reports of such a major clash in a populated area took more than a day to surface.

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WATCH: Aftermath of battles across eastern Ukraine

Ukraine president urges citizens to vote

In Kyiv, Ukraine’s caretaker president urged all voters to take part in Sunday’s crucial ballot to “cement the foundation of our nation.” Yet it was uncertain whether any voting could take place in eastern Ukraine, where, in addition to the fighting, a vote boycott and threats against election workers were disrupting the upcoming ballot.

AP journalists saw three dead from Friday’s fighting in the eastern Donetsk region, another area that has declared independence. One rebel leader said 16 more people died Friday in fighting there – 10 soldiers, four rebels and two civilians -but there was no immediate way to verify his statement.

Speaking at an investment forum in St. Petersburg, Putin said Russia will "respect the choice of the Ukrainian people" and will work with the new leadership. He said Russia wants peace and order to be restored in its neighbour.
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Markets rallied and the ruble surged in value against the dollar Friday as the CEOs and economic experts at the forum praised Putin’s efforts to defuse the tensions.

The Russian leader also spoke of mending ties with the United States and the 28-nation European Union, which have slapped asset freezes and travel bans on members of his entourage and had threatened to introduce more crippling sanctions if Russia tried to derail Sunday’s vote in Ukraine.

READ MORE: Russia says military moving away from Ukraine

Alexei Makarkin, deputy head of the Moscow-based Center for Political Technologies think-tank, said Putin’s comments reflected a desire to avoid another round of Western sanctions. He added, however, that Russia’s relations with Ukraine will be unlikely to normalize any time soon.

Twenty-one candidates are competing Sunday to become Ukraine’s next leader. Polls show billionaire candy-maker Petro Poroshenko with a commanding lead but falling short of the absolute majority needed to win in the first round. His nearest challenger is Yulia Tymoshenko, the divisive former prime minister, who is trailing by a significant margin. If no one wins in the first round, a runoff will be held June 15 – and most polls predict Poroshenko’s victory in that contest.

Poroshenko, the likely winner, will probably focus on forging close ties with the West, said Makarkin, the analyst.

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“He may take Russia’s interests into account, but only to a limited extent,” he said. “A quick warming of ties is unlikely.”

Russia annexed the Crimean Peninsula in March, grabbing a large section of Ukraine’s Black Sea coastline and triggering the worst crisis in relations with the West since the Cold War.

VIDEO GALLERY: The Crisis in Ukraine

Putin says Ukraine in ‘full-scale civil war’

Putin blamed the crisis on what he described as Western “snobbery” and a stubborn reluctance to listen to Russia’s economic and security concerns. He said the sanctions on his inner circle were unfair.

He insisted Russia had nothing to do with what he described as the “chaos and a full-scale civil war” in Ukraine, saying that was triggered by the West’s support of a “coup” which chased Ukraine’s pro-Russian president from power in February.

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“They supported the coup and plunged the country into chaos, and now they try to blame us for that and have us clean up their mess,” he said.

Putin also alleged that by pressing the EU to impose stronger sanctions against Russia, the U.S. was trying to weaken a competitor.

“Maybe the Americans, who are quite shrewd, want to win a competitive edge over Europe by insisting on introducing sanctions against Russia?” he asked.

On a more positive note, he hoped that “common sense will push our partners in the United States and Europe toward continuing co-operation with Russia.”

Sergeyev said Putin’s comments were “good signs,” but “we trust deeds, not words.”

When White House spokesman Jay Carney was asked whether he believed Putin’s comments, he replied: “We’ll have to see whether in fact Russia does recognize and take steps to engage with the Ukrainian government and the victor of the presidential election.”

U.S. State Department spokeswoman Marie Harf said Russian officials “need to call on the separatists that they have influence with to not try to disrupt the election.”

In a live televised address from Kyiv, Ukraine’s acting President Oleksandr Turchynov, who is not running in Sunday’s election, emphasized the importance of the vote to choose a new leader.

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“Today, we are building a new European country, the foundation of which was laid by millions of Ukrainians who proved that they are capable of defending their own choice and their country,” Turchynov said. “We will never allow anyone to rob us of our freedom and independence, turn our Ukraine into a part of the post-Soviet empire.”

Ukraine election to take place Sunday

Authorities in Kyiv had hoped that a new president would unify the divided nation, where the west looks toward Europe and the east has strong traditional ties to Russia. But they have now acknowledged it will be impossible to hold the vote in some areas in the east – especially in Donetsk and Luhansk, where insurgents have declared independence and pledged to derail the vote. Election workers and activists say gunmen there have threatened them and seized their voting roles and stamps.

Joao Soares of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe said Friday he expects problems with voting in “less than 20 per cent of the polling stations.”

READ MORE: Locals get angry with pro-Russia separatists

Fighting, meanwhile, still cast a shadow over the presidential vote.

Associated Press journalists saw the bodies of two Ukrainian soldiers Friday in the village of Karlivka, 20 kilometres from the eastern city of Donetsk. One body was lying along the road, the other behind a burnt-down cafe near a bridge controlled by pro-Russia insurgents.

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A spokesman for the pro-Russia rebels, who identified himself only by his first name, Dmitry, for security reasons, said 10 government soldiers, four of his men and two civilians were killed in fighting Friday. He spoke in Karlivka.

At another site outside Donetsk, AP journalists saw another body lying near a checkpoint manned by insurgents.

Fighting also continued around the eastern city of Slovyansk, where Ukrainian government forces retaliated against rebel fire, damaging several houses. There was no word on casualties.

Leonard reported from Karlivka, Ukraine. Nebi Qena in Karlivka, Alexander Zemlianichenko in Slovyansk, Nataliya Vasilyeva in Kyiv and Vladimir Isachenkov in Moscow contributed to this report.

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