French President Emmanuel Macron announced Monday (26 August) that the leaders of Russia, Ukraine, Germany and France would hold talks in September aimed at ending the conflict in eastern Ukraine, Euractiv reports.
“We think that the conditions exist for a useful summit,” Macron, who has hailed the election of a new president in Ukraine as providing an opportunity to end the five-year war, said at the end of the G7 summit in France.
Macron said the talks would be held in September, but did not give an exact date.
Ukraine has been locked in conflict with Russia-backed rebels in its country’s east since Moscow forcibly annexed Crimea in 2014, a move the international community refuses to recognise.
The so-called ‘Normandy format’ – France, Germany, Russia and Ukraine – has produced the so-called Minsk agreements of 2014 and 2015 which haven’t really worked and haven’t been updated since. Russia and Ukraine accuse each other for the failure to implement the agreements.
Macron has already met with Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelenskiy and invited Russia’s Vladimir Putin to France for talks last week ahead of the G7 summit — which Russia was excluded from after the Crimea seizure.
Ukrainian comedian Volodymyr Zelenskiy, a political novice and favourite to win Kyiv’s presidential vote, will head to Paris Friday (12 April) to meet French President Emmanuel Macron.
After his talks with Putin, Macron said there was a “real opportunity” for peace in Ukraine following Zelenskiy’s election.
French President Emmanuel Macron and Russia’s Vladimir Putin on Monday (19 August) agreed changes in Ukraine had bolstered the chances of peace in its east but clashed on Syria, as the Russian leader made a rare bilateral visit to a key EU power.
Zelenskiy himself has offered to meet Putin for face-to-face talks and has spoken to him by phone in recent weeks.
The European Union has imposed several rounds of sanctions on Russia over Crimea.
The fighting between Ukraine forces and Russian-backed separatists in the Donbas region has killed more than 13,000 people so far.