It includes the following passage:
We strongly condemn Russia’s continued and deliberate destabilization of eastern Ukraine in breach of international law, including the provision of tanks, advanced air defence systems and other heavy weapons to the separatists, and military activities, which violate the agreements reached in Minsk in September. Russia’s stated “respect” for the results of the separatists’ so-called elections on 2 November, which we do not and will not recognise, has further exacerbated tensions. We condemn Russia’s military build-up in Crimea, as well as the worsening human rights situation on the Crimean peninsula. We call on Russia to reverse its illegal and illegitimate self-declared “annexation” of Crimea, which we do not and will not recognise, and to respect the rights of the local population, including the native Crimean Tatars. Russia’s actions undermine the security of Ukraine and have serious implications for the stability and security of the entire Euro-Atlantic area. In that regard, we are also concerned with Russia’s stated plans for further military build-up on the Black Sea, which will potentially have further implications on the stability of the region.
From our newsroom:
NATO members and Ukraine have condemned Moscow for what they called Russia's "deliberate destabilization of eastern Ukraine" and its military buildup in Crimea, the Black Sea peninsula it annexed from Ukraine in March.
"We condemn Russia's military build-up in Crimea," the foreign ministers of 28 NATO nations and Ukraine said in a statement after a meeting in Brussels. "We are also concerned with Russia's stated plans for further military build-up on the Black Sea."
They strongly condemned Russia's "continued and deliberate destabilization of eastern Ukraine in breach of international law, including the provision of tanks, advanced air defense systems and other heavy weapons to the separatists."
Russia denies involvement in the conflict that has killed more than 4,300 people in eastern Ukraine, despite what Kyiv and NATO say is clear evidence of direct military support for the pro-Russian separatists.
Based on reporting by Reuters
Suggesting they might be given roles in the soon-to-be-formed Ukrainian government:
RFE/RL's Georgian Service reports that Georgian ex-President Mikheil Saakashvili says he has indeed rejected a deputy prime minister’s post in Ukraine. Ukrainian media had reported earlier that Saakashvili, who is hated by Russia's leadership, could be offered such a post.
Media reports in Ukraine on December 2 said that two members of Saakashvili's former government, Aleksandr Kvitashvili and Eka Zguladze, had been named by Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko's bloc as potential candidates for the posts of health minister and deputy interior minister, respectively.
Georgian Deputy Prime Minister Kakha Kaladze said on December 2 that it would be "painful" to see former Georgian officials, some of whom are suspected of crimes, in Ukraine's government.
Saakashvili, whose term ended in 2013 after nearly a decade in office, has been charged with several crimes by the government that came to power after his party's defeat in a 2012 parliamentary election.
He and members of his former government say the charges against them are politically motivated.
Saakashvili lives self-imposed exile in the United States.