A senior UN official warned on Wednesday that open warfare may erupt once more in eastern Ukraine, following reports of Russian tanks and troops crossing the border.
“We are deeply concerned by the possibility of a return to full-scale fighting,” UN Assistant Secretary-General Jens Anders Toyberg-Frandzen told an emergency meeting of the UN Security Council.
The meeting was requested by the US after NATO said columns of Russian tanks, artillery and troops had entered eastern Ukraine in the past two days. Russia denied the claims.
More than 930,000 people have been driven from their homes and the UN official warned “the numbers could grow exponentially” with a surge in violence.
“Alternatively, the conflict may simmer in this way for months with sporadic low-level battles marked by periods of increased hostilities and casualties,” Toyberg-Frandzen said.
Both scenarios spell “catastrophe for Ukraine,” he added.
The UN official raised a third prospect of a “frozen and protracted conflict that would entrench the status quo in southeastern Ukraine for years or even decades to come.”
The 15-member council has no plans to adopt a resolution condemning Russia, which has veto power. It was the 26th meeting called by the UN Security Council to address the crisis.
Asked what he expected from the meeting, Russian Deputy Ambassador to the UN Alexander Pankin bluntly told journalists “nothing” as he headed into council chambers.
NATO claims of a Russian military buildup in east Ukraine “do not reflect the situation on the ground” and are a “foray into propaganda,” Pankin later told the council.
US Ambassador to the UN Samantha Power accused Russia of working to undermine the Minsk agreement reached in September that provided for a ceasefire among other steps to restore peace.
Russia, she said, “talks peace, but it keeps fueling war.”
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