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UN Security Council holds 26th emergency meeting on Ukraine cease-fire

Ukraine President Petro Poroshenko speaks during a meeting of the national security council in the capital Kiev on November 4, 2014. GENYA SAVILOV/AFP/Getty Images

The U.N. Security Council met for the 26th time in emergency session on Ukraine as the U.N. warned of a possible return to “full-scale fighting” in the rebel-held east.

Wednesday’s meeting came hours after NATO’s top commander said new columns of Russian troops and tanks have rolled into eastern Ukraine, which Moscow promptly denied.

The main eastern city, Donetsk, has seen its heaviest shelling in recent weeks despite a cease-fire signed two months ago between Ukraine and Russia-backed separatists. The cease-fire has been violated almost daily, and the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe says monitors have seen convoys of unmarked vehicles near cities in the region.

U.S. Ambassador Samantha Power told the council that Russia “talks of peace, but it keeps fueling war.” The United States called the emergency meeting.

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READ MORE: Russia’s military plans regular patrols from Arctic to Gulf of Mexico

Russia’s representative began his remarks by warning that council meetings should not turn into farces and called the storm of criticism from fellow council members “yet another foray into propaganda with new flourishes.”

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The Security Council has met repeatedly on Ukraine since the crisis began early this year, but little action can be taken as permanent member Russia has veto power.

U.N. Assistant Secretary-General for Political Affairs Jens Toyberg-Frandzen told the council that the United Nations is “deeply concerned over the possibility of a return to full-scale fighting.” Either that, or Ukraine could face a months-long simmering conflict that would be catastrophic, he said. The conflict could also become a “frozen” one that lingers for years or even decades, he added.

READ MORE: NATO says Russia troops have entered Ukraine, Moscow denies claim

Luxembourg’s ambassador pointed out that more than 4,000 people have been killed in the conflict.

Lithuanian Ambassador Raimonda Murmokaite, a consistently sharp Russia critic, said Russia is waging “an undeclared war” on Ukraine.

She also slammed Moscow’s announcement Wednesday that it will send long-range strategic bombers on regular patrol missions across the globe, saying it “all points to a more aggressive, unilateral Russian posture going well beyond Ukraine’s borders.”

 

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