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A Ukrainian serviceman stands guard in the city of Schastye in the Luhansk region late last month.
A Ukrainian serviceman stands guard in the city of Schastye in the Luhansk region late last month.

Live Blog: Ukraine In Crisis (Archive)

Final News Summary For September 1, 2017

-- EDITOR'S NOTE: We have started a new Ukraine Live Blog as of September 2, 2017. Find it here.

-- Ukraine says it will introduce new border-crossing rules from next year, affecting citizens of “countries that pose risks for Ukraine.”

-- The Association Agreement strengthening ties between Ukraine and the European Union entered into force on September 1, marking an end to four years of political drama surrounding the accord.

-- The trial of Crimean journalist Mykola Semena will resume later this month after the first hearing in weeks produced little progress toward a resolution of the politically charged case.

*NOTE: Times are stated according to local time in Kyiv (GMT +3)

16:07 31.8.2017

EU Brexit negotiator worried about Ukraine funding:

By RFE/RL

BRUSSELS -- The European Union's chief Brexit negotiator has expressed concern that Britain might not honor long-term EU loans to Ukraine after it leaves the 28-member union.

Speaking on August 31 after the third round of negotiations on Britain's exit from the EU, Michel Barnier said that Britain "recognized" that it has financial obligations toward the EU after it leaves, which is due to occur at the end of March 2019.

But he said he learned this week that British payments will be limited to “their last payment to the EU budget before departure."

The EU has "joint obligations toward third countries -- for example, we have guaranteed long-term loans to Ukraine together,” Barnier said. "After this week, it is clear that the U.K. doesn't feel legally obliged to honor these obligations after departure.”

The EU has so far pledged a total 12.3 billion euros ($14.6 billion) in loans to Ukraine. Of that, 3.4 billion euros has come in the shape of macro-financial assistance, out of which 2.2 billion euros has already been provided.

A total of 8.9 billion euros has been pledged by the EU's financial institutions, the European Investment Bank, and the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development.

Britain contributes about 14 percent of the EU budget. (w/Rikard Jozwiak in Brussels)

16:06 31.8.2017

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15:34 31.8.2017

Belarus says missing Ukrainian teen entered country before claims of Russian abduction:

By RFE/RL

Authorities in Belarus say that a Ukrainian teenager whose disappearance has triggered claims of a Russia-orchestrated kidnapping entered the country a week earlier but that they have no record of his departure.

The case of 19-year-old Pavlo Hryb, whose father reported him missing after his son left for Belarus to meet a young woman, has rattled ties between Kyiv and Minsk and prompted Ukrainian appeals to Moscow to clarify whether Hryb is in Russian custody.

The father, Ihor, wrote on Facebook last week that his son departed the Ukrainian city of Chernihiv on August 24 to meet the woman, whom he’d met on social media, in the Belarusian city of Homel.

His father says that after Hryb did not return, he went to search for him in Homel. There, he claims, he learned “unofficially” that his son was wanted in Russia on terror-related charges, though there has been no public confirmation of this from Russian authorities.

Hryb’s father has alleged that his son was lured into meeting the woman by Russia’s Federal Security Service (FSB) and kidnapped by its agents.

“I immediately understood that an FSB special operation was conducted,” he told Current Time TV, a Russian-language television network run jointly by RFE/RL and Voice of America.

He said his son had published social-media posts criticizing Russia for its 2014 seizure of Ukraine’s Crimean Peninsula and backing of armed separatists in eastern Ukraine. He added, however, that Hryb had not served in the military due to a disability.

Ukrainian media outlets say they identified and interviewed the woman, reportedly a 17-year-old resident of the southern Russian city of Sochi. They have quoted her as saying that she persuaded Hryb to meet her under pressure from the FSB.

For a week after Hryb’s disappearance, Belarusian authorities had yet to confirm whether the Ukrainian man had entered or left the country. But Belarusian border officials on August 31 said Hryb had entered that country legally on August 24.

But Anton Bychkouski, a spokesman for Belarus’s state border committee, told RFE/RL’s Belarus Service that, “at the moment,” authorities have no record of Hryb leaving the country.

Diplomatic tensions have flared between Kyiv and Minsk over the case. In an August 30 television interview, Ukrainian Deputy Foreign Minister Olena Zerkal criticized Belarusian efforts to locate Hryb.

She accused Belarus of acting “like a partner in words, but in reality they behave in a completely different way” and suggested that Kyiv might not support Minsk’s bid to join the World Trade Organization (WTO).

Minsk hit back a day later, calling Zerkal’s comments “unacceptable” and saying that the Belarusian Foreign Ministry had called in the top official at the Ukrainian Embassy in Kyiv over the matter.

Belarusian Foreign Ministry spokesman Dzmitry Mironchik said in an August 31 statement that several law enforcement and security agencies have been looking for Hryb “on the entire territory of the country” based on an August 29 request from the Ukrainian Embassy.

Mironchik added that “people, unfortunately, disappear for all kinds of reasons” and that “if a 19-year-old young man’s parents and own government didn’t keep track of him, that’s no reason to shift the blame.”

Ukrainian Foreign Minister Pavlo Klimkin said that he planned to raise the matter with his Belarusian counterpart, Uladzimer Makey, at an international meeting in Budapest on August 31.

The Ukrainian government’s top human rights official, meanwhile, said on August 30 that she had appealed to her Russian counterpart citing “information” that Hryb had been “transferred to the law enforcement agencies of the Russian Federation.”

"I ask you to check the information about the fact of Pavlo Hryb’s detention, the legal grounds for his detention, his location, the conditions of detention, and his state of health," Ukrainian Ombudswoman Valeria Lutkovska wrote in a letter to Kremlin human rights point woman Tatyana Moskalkova. (w/RFE/RL’s Belarus and Ukrainian services, Current Time TV, Hromadske, 5.ua)

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