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Russia says OSCE monitors should stay in Ukraine

Members of the Ukrainian army inspect an area near Slovyansk, Ukraine, Friday, May 30, 2014.
Members of the Ukrainian army inspect an area near Slovyansk, Ukraine, Friday, May 30, 2014. (AP Photo/Efrem Lukatsky)

MOSCOW – Russia’s Foreign Ministry criticized a suggestion by an OSCE official that the organization could consider withdrawing its observer mission from Ukraine because of safety concerns, as shooting between government troops and pro-Russian rebels continued in the region on Saturday.

The Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe says it lost contact on Thursday with a group of monitors in separatist eastern Ukraine. Another group of monitors has been held by eastern rebels since Monday.

READ MORE: East Ukraine quiet raises leadership questions

Wolfgang Ischinger, the OSCE’s negotiator on national dialogue in Ukraine, told German broadcaster ZDF this week that the monitor mission might have to withdraw if the organization fears for its employees’ lives.

But the Russian ministry said in a statement Saturday that “amid Kyiv’s intentionally intensified punitive operation in the east of the country, it is essential to step up the work of international observers.”

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Confrontations continued Saturday between government troops and the rebels, who have seized administrative and police buildings across the east and want to join the region to Russia.

READ MORE: Ukraine sees Russia as fount of insurgent threat

At a government-controlled checkpoint in the city of Slovyansk, which has been the epicenter of the conflict, troops came under fire but repelled the attack without casualties. There have been daily attempts in recent weeks to break the army’s ring of checkpoints around the city.

Vladislav Seleznyov, press secretary for Ukraine’s anti-terrorist operation in the east, said Saturday that the army had successfully destroyed a cannon in Slovyansk, which he said rebels had been using to shell civilian buildings in the town.

As violence escalated in the region, the Ukrainian and pro-Russian sides have blamed each other for the rising number of civilian casualties in the conflict.

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