OSCE head: Cease-fire in eastern Ukraine continues to hold on

A renewed cease-fire in eastern Ukraine has held for more than 10 days, the head of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe said Saturday. Will it last long enough to push political talks forward?

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Tobias Schwarz/Pool Photo/AP
Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov, left, arrives for a meeting with the French Foreign minister Laurent Fabius ahead of the meeting with their German and Ukrainian counterparts at the foreign ministry's guest house, Villa Borsig, at Lake Tegel in Berlin on Saturday Sept. 12, 2015. A renewed cease-fire in eastern Ukraine has held for more than 10 days, the head of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe said Saturday.

A renewed cease-fire in eastern Ukraine has held for more than 10 days, creating the possibility that political talks can move forward to resolve the conflict, the head of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe said Saturday.

Despite a cease-fire declared in February, both Ukrainian troops and the Russia-backed separatists carried out regular artillery strikes until they pledged anew to implement the truce on Sept. 1, the day children return to school. Some 8,000 people have been killed since the fighting began in April 2014, according to the U.N.

OSCE Secretary General Lamberto Zannier said he had just come from the southeastern city of Mariupol and nearby Shyrokyne, a center of recent fighting, and the situation was calm. His group is charged with monitoring the cease-fire.

"So the cease-fire now has being holding for more than 10 days and that's good news, because that is opening now the space to make progress on a political level," he told The Associated Press.

Russian President Vladimir Putin also mentioned the cease-fire on Saturday, calling it the "main achievement" of efforts to find a peaceful solution to the crisis in eastern Ukraine.

The foreign ministers of Russia, Ukraine, Germany and France gathered in Berlin on Saturday night to discuss implementation of the February cease-fire, ahead of a summit of the countries' leaders expected next month.

German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier said before the meeting that "two weeks of a cease-fire are not a reason to give the all-clear. This is all still very fragile."

He urged both sides to use the cease-fire to make progress on other matters, the dpa news agency reported.

The cease-fire deal provides for a political settlement, including local elections in areas under separatist control, but the Ukrainian government and the separatists have failed to agree on how those elections will be held.

The two rebel regions have announced plans to hold their own elections on Oct. 18 and Nov. 1, but the Kiev government has said those vote would be in violation of the cease-fire agreement.

Zannier said the OSCE was ready to send international observers to the elections if "the Ukrainian government tells us 'Yes, those elections are based on Ukrainian law.'"

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