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Russia still arming Ukraine rebels despite truce: NATO chief
By Olga SHYLENKO
Yavoriv, Ukraine (AFP) Sept 21, 2015


Russia jails ex-military engineer over Swedish job bid
Moscow (AFP) Sept 21, 2015 - A Russian court on Monday sentenced a former military intelligence engineer to 14 years in jail for treason after he wrote to a Swedish organisation seeking a job.

Gennady Kravtsov was accused of passing state secrets to Sweden by sending his resume in 2010. He was arrested on charges of treason in May 2014 as part of a classified case.

Kravtsov's defence team has said he worked for the Main Intelligence Directorate, the intelligence branch of the Russian military, for 15 years and quit in 2005.

In a statement sent to Russian news agencies, the Federal Security Service (FSB) said that Kravtsov applied for work with the "Radio-technical centre of the Swedish defence ministry" in which he "passed information about activities of the Russian space intelligence."

This information contained "state secrets", thereby threatening Russia's security, the FSB said.

The Swedish defence ministry controls an agency called the National Defence Radio Establishment, though it was not clear whether this was the organisation where Kravtsov sought employment.

The trial was closed to the media and the judge sentenced him to serve 14 years in a strict penal colony.

His lawyer Ivan Pavlov said the prosecution based the case on classified regulations that were not shown to the defence, some of which went into effect after his client quit the military, and that he had been forced to "work blind".

Kravtsov was not given his own case materials due to their "secret" nature, Pavlov wrote on his Facebook page.

"The process of investigating and hearing cases that deal with national security in Russia is highly similar to the inquisition," he wrote after the verdict, adding that there are more and more cases like this.

Defence lawyers are denied access to case materials, forced to give non-disclosure pleas and prevented from calling their own expert witnesses to the stand, he wrote. He added that Kravtsov's verdict will be appealed.

Russia has charged an increasing number of its citizens with high treason in recent months amid heightened tensions with the West over the Ukraine conflict.

Among other high-profile treason cases was that of a provincial housewife and mother of seven who phoned the Ukrainian embassy worried that soldiers stationed in her town may be sent there. The charges were later dropped after a public outcry.

Russia is still sending weapons to separatist rebels battling the Ukrainian government despite a fresh truce in the war-torn east of the country, NATO chief Jens Stoltenberg said Monday.

"The ceasefire is mainly holding. This is, of course, encouraging because that was not the case before," Stoltenberg said on the first day of his visit to Ukraine.

"But the situation is very fragile," he said at a joint press conference with Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko at a military base in western Ukraine.

"Russia continues to support the separatists, provide them with weapons, with different kinds of equipment, training, forces."

Kiev and the West insist that Moscow has sent troops and arms across the border to fuel a separatist conflict that has claimed almost 8,000 lives since April 2014, allegations Moscow vehemently denies.

Fighting has dropped to nearly its lowest level since the conflict began after a fresh ceasefire deal was agreed on September 1 following a series of failed truces.

Stoltenberg on Monday started a two-day visit, his first trip to the crisis-hit nation, in a show of support for Ukraine's pro-Western government.

Ex-Soviet Ukraine says it wants to join the US-led security bloc but NATO has been lukewarm on the proposal.

Any move by Ukraine towards NATO membership would stir ire in Moscow, which has accused the organisation of increasingly trying to hem it in following the collapse of the Soviet Union.

NATO has ratcheted up its activities in eastern Europe, rotating troops and equipment in its ex-Communist members to ease fears of Russian expansionism.

The visit of Stoltenberg is "a part of the policy that NATO has been following for a year and a half," a senior Ukrainian security official told AFP.

"They understand very well who is the aggressor and take appropriate measures."

The official said he expects the level of violence will remain low ahead of Russian President Vladimir Putin's highly-anticipated speech at the United Nations General Assembly on September 28.

Some observers suspect Putin aims to deflect attention from Ukraine onto the conflict in Syria, where Moscow is pushing for an anti-terrorist coalition.

"The truce will last at least until Putin's trip to the General Assembly," the official said, speaking on condition of anonymity.

- 'Fake elections' -

Stoltenberg insisted that any attempt by separatists to hold their own unilateral local elections in the territories they control would breach a peace plan signed in February in Belarussian capital Minsk.

"They will be fake elections and they will not be recognised by any NATO ally," he told journalists.

He was echoed by NATO member Germany which denounced possible separatist polls as a breach of the Minsk peace deal and urged Russia to distance itself from the idea.

"It would be a serious breach of the Minsk agreements," Steffen Seibert, Chancellor Angela Merkel's spokesman, said referring to local elections planned by two rebel-held provinces on October 18 and November 1.

"And it is regrettable that Russia has not distanced itself from the plans so far."

Russia's foreign ministry last week said it "understands" the decision by the rebels to hold the polls and "sees it as a forced step" after truce violations by Kiev.

Under the agreements, the separatist regions must conduct local elections by the end of the year "in accordance with Ukrainian legislation and the law of Ukraine".

The rebels, however, want to hold local elections under their own terms, which include barring all pro-Ukrainian candidates and holding the polls on days that do not correspond to local elections planned in the rest of Ukraine on October 25.


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