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Russia's 'Aid' Convoy Has Gone Rogue And Is Headed To Rebel-Held Ukraine

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Russia's 'Aid' Convoy Has Gone Rogue And Is Headed To Rebel-Held Ukraine - Business Insider


A large Russian aid convoy resumed its journey toward Ukraine on Thursday, taking a road leading directly toward a border crossing controlled by pro-Russian rebels in the Luhansk region.

The fleet of 262 vehicles, including about 200 trucks carrying aid, has stopped 15 miles from the border.

The convoy of more than 200 vehicles had been parked at a military depot in the southern Russian city of Voronezh since late Tuesday amid disagreement over how and where the aid could be delivered to Ukraine, where government troops are battling pro-Russia separatists.

On Thursday the white trucks, some flying the red flag of Moscow city and accompanied by green military vehicles, traveled down a winding highway through sunflower fields and rolling green hills. They turned off that road near the city of Kamensk-Shakhtinsky, driving west toward the Ukraine border crossing of Izvaryne, which is currently under rebel control.

By taking such a route, Russian appeared to be intent on not abiding by a tentative agreement to deliver aid to a government-controlled border checkpoint in the Kharkiv region, where it could more easily be inspected by Ukraine and the Red Cross. Moscow has insisted it coordinated the dispatch of the goods, which it says range from baby food and canned meat to portable generators and sleeping bags, with the international Red Cross.

ICRC spokeswoman Anastasia Isyuk stressed Thursday that talks between the organization, Ukraine, and Russia were continuing but that she could not confirm where the Russian convoy was headed.

"The plans keep changing, the discussions are going ahead, and we will not confirm for sure until we know an agreement has been reached," Isyuk said in Geneva. "The practical details still have to be clarified between the two sides."

The foreign ministers of Russia and Ukraine spoke on Thursday about a Russian humanitarian aid convoy heading toward eastern Ukraine, the Russian Foreign Ministry said.

It said the telephone conversation between Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov and his Ukrainian counterpartPavlo Klimkin were part of "continuing intense contacts" involving Russia, Ukraine and the International Committee of the Red Cross.

"They discussed the practical aspects of the swift realization of an initiative to provide humanitarian assistance to the population of southeast Ukraine," the ministry said.

Officials in Ukraine say they fear the aid mission could be used as a pretext for establishing a permanent Russian presence in the region, and confusion over the arrangements has stoked fears of Russian intervention both in Kiev and the West.

On Thursday, the Ukrainian government announced that it was dispatching its own convoy of humanitarian aid to the region. In a statement published on its website, the government said trucks would depart from the government-controlled cities of Kiev, Dnepropetrovsk, and Kharkiv for a town in the Luhansk region on Thursday. It gave no details about what the trucks contained.

Leaders in Ukraine and the West have accused Moscow of providing arms and expertise to pro-Russian rebels in eastern Ukraine, who have been battling government forces since April. Moscow has denied those charges, but the breakdown in communication over humanitarian aid has further stoked fears of Russian intervention.

On Wednesday, Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko accused Moscow of possibly planning a "direct invasion of Ukrainian territory under the guise of delivering humanitarian aid."

Russia's state-controlled media played down the convoy's move to travel south to Luhansk. Rossiya television said the route change was necessary because the Kiev government has refused to allow Russian trucks to enter through Kharkiv.

The Ukrainian presidential administration has said it will accept aid brought through government-controlled checkpoints in the Kharkiv region and vetted by the Red Cross.

Russian President Vladimir Putin's spokesman, Dmitry Peskov, insisted Wednesday that the operation was proceeding in full cooperation with the Red Cross, but he did not comment on the route.

Attempts to ease the humanitarian crisis come as Ukrainian forces step up their efforts to dislodge the rebels from their last strongholds in Donetsk and Luhansk.

The U.N.'s human rights office in Geneva said Wednesday that its "very conservative estimates" show the overall death toll has risen to at least 2,086 people as of Aug. 10, up from 1,129 on July 26.
 
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The red cross uses its vehicles to help turkey and nato cross weapons over the syrian border. They arm terrorists in Syria. This is the organization nato wants to check Russias cargo. The level of cynical hypocrisy coming out of nato talking heads is beyond ridiculous. Is your average human being that stupid and gullible?
 
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Russia's 'Aid' Convoy Has Gone Rogue And Is Headed To Rebel-Held Ukraine - Business Insider


A large Russian aid convoy resumed its journey toward Ukraine on Thursday, taking a road leading directly toward a border crossing controlled by pro-Russian rebels in the Luhansk region.

The fleet of 262 vehicles, including about 200 trucks carrying aid, has stopped 15 miles from the border.

The convoy of more than 200 vehicles had been parked at a military depot in the southern Russian city of Voronezh since late Tuesday amid disagreement over how and where the aid could be delivered to Ukraine, where government troops are battling pro-Russia separatists.

On Thursday the white trucks, some flying the red flag of Moscow city and accompanied by green military vehicles, traveled down a winding highway through sunflower fields and rolling green hills. They turned off that road near the city of Kamensk-Shakhtinsky, driving west toward the Ukraine border crossing of Izvaryne, which is currently under rebel control.

By taking such a route, Russian appeared to be intent on not abiding by a tentative agreement to deliver aid to a government-controlled border checkpoint in the Kharkiv region, where it could more easily be inspected by Ukraine and the Red Cross. Moscow has insisted it coordinated the dispatch of the goods, which it says range from baby food and canned meat to portable generators and sleeping bags, with the international Red Cross.

ICRC spokeswoman Anastasia Isyuk stressed Thursday that talks between the organization, Ukraine, and Russia were continuing but that she could not confirm where the Russian convoy was headed.

"The plans keep changing, the discussions are going ahead, and we will not confirm for sure until we know an agreement has been reached," Isyuk said in Geneva. "The practical details still have to be clarified between the two sides."

The foreign ministers of Russia and Ukraine spoke on Thursday about a Russian humanitarian aid convoy heading toward eastern Ukraine, the Russian Foreign Ministry said.

It said the telephone conversation between Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov and his Ukrainian counterpartPavlo Klimkin were part of "continuing intense contacts" involving Russia, Ukraine and the International Committee of the Red Cross.

"They discussed the practical aspects of the swift realization of an initiative to provide humanitarian assistance to the population of southeast Ukraine," the ministry said.

Officials in Ukraine say they fear the aid mission could be used as a pretext for establishing a permanent Russian presence in the region, and confusion over the arrangements has stoked fears of Russian intervention both in Kiev and the West.

On Thursday, the Ukrainian government announced that it was dispatching its own convoy of humanitarian aid to the region. In a statement published on its website, the government said trucks would depart from the government-controlled cities of Kiev, Dnepropetrovsk, and Kharkiv for a town in the Luhansk region on Thursday. It gave no details about what the trucks contained.

Leaders in Ukraine and the West have accused Moscow of providing arms and expertise to pro-Russian rebels in eastern Ukraine, who have been battling government forces since April. Moscow has denied those charges, but the breakdown in communication over humanitarian aid has further stoked fears of Russian intervention.

On Wednesday, Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko accused Moscow of possibly planning a "direct invasion of Ukrainian territory under the guise of delivering humanitarian aid."

Russia's state-controlled media played down the convoy's move to travel south to Luhansk. Rossiya television said the route change was necessary because the Kiev government has refused to allow Russian trucks to enter through Kharkiv.

The Ukrainian presidential administration has said it will accept aid brought through government-controlled checkpoints in the Kharkiv region and vetted by the Red Cross.

Russian President Vladimir Putin's spokesman, Dmitry Peskov, insisted Wednesday that the operation was proceeding in full cooperation with the Red Cross, but he did not comment on the route.

Attempts to ease the humanitarian crisis come as Ukrainian forces step up their efforts to dislodge the rebels from their last strongholds in Donetsk and Luhansk.

The U.N.'s human rights office in Geneva said Wednesday that its "very conservative estimates" show the overall death toll has risen to at least 2,086 people as of Aug. 10, up from 1,129 on July 26.

WTH,@vostok is this part of some grand plan
 
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WTH,@vostok is this part of some grand plan

Russian military vehicles enter Ukraine as aid convoy stops short of border | World news | The Guardian

The white trucks of humanitarian aid rumbled through Russia in a convoy stretching for miles, moving slowly southwards on the M4 highway, amid a landscape of fertile fields and Ladas stopped at the roadside – their boots overflowing with watermelons for sale.

But, while the trucks came to a halt well short of Ukraine's border, a different Russian convoy did make the crossing into Ukrainian territory late on Thursday evening.

The Guardian saw a column of 23 armoured personnel carriers, supported by fuel trucks and other logistics vehicles with official Russian military plates, travelling towards the border near the Russian town of Donetsk – about 200km away from Donetsk, Ukraine.

After pausing by the side of the road until nightfall, the convoy crossed into Ukrainian territory, using a rough dirt track and clearly crossing through a gap in a barbed wire fence that demarcates the border. Armed men were visible in the gloom by the border fence as the column moved into Ukraine. Kiev has lost control of its side of the border in this area.

The trucks are unlikely to represent a full-scale official Russian invasion, and it was unclear how far they planned to travel inside Ukrainian territory and how long they would stay. But it was incontrovertible evidence of what Ukraine has long claimed – that Russian troops are active inside its borders.

It was also ironic given the attention to the huge convoy of humanitarian aid that moved slowly southwards on the M4 highway on Thursday. As the convoy moved closer to the stretch of border controlled by pro-Russian rebels it was hard to escape the feeling that Moscow's aid convoy had the potential to turn into a slow-motion disaster, perhaps even prompting a moment that could push Ukraine and Russia out of the messy conflict fought by proxies into full-blown, open engagement.

According to Moscow, the convoy is a goodwill gesture, packed with much-needed aid for the residents of eastern Ukraine. In Kiev's view, the convoy is at best a cynical ploy; at worst, a kind of Trojan centipede, winding its way into the country at a border point no longer controlled by Ukrainian forces, the nature of its cargo taken only on trust.

The humanitarian convoy stalled for 24 hours in the city of Voronezh during Wednesday, but set out at dawn on Thursday.

At one point, with President Vladimir Putin more than two hours late to address a gathering of top Russian officials in newly annexed Crimea, and the first lorries in the convoy taking the turnoff from the main M4 highway towards rebel-controlled Luhansk in Ukraine, there were whispers that perhaps Putin's announcement was being delayed to announce that the trucks would enter Ukraine whether or not the country's authorities gave the green light, a move Kiev has said would be seen as an invasion.
 
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WTH,@vostok is this part of some grand plan
In fact, to give humanitarian assistance to representatives of the Kiev regime - it is like to throw on trashcan. They will plunder everything until the last canned food. The only chance - to drive directly to the Donbass.
 
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Any idea about civilian casualties in Donetsk...how many civilians are still stuck there???
 
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If Russia wanted to give the rebels more weapons, they'd just do it discreetly without making such a fuss about it. Maybe they want to transport them in larger numbers, or it could be a "F*ck you" to NATO.
Its more likely that they're really giving aid to the people affected by the fighting and don't trust the Kiev regime, so they're going to give it directly.
 
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If Russia wanted to give the rebels more weapons, they'd just do it discreetly without making such a fuss about it. Maybe they want to transport them in larger numbers, or it could be a "F*ck you" to NATO.
Its more likely that they're really giving aid to the people affected by the fighting and don't trust the Kiev regime, so they're going to give it directly.
This convoy of 280 trucks is carrying food, blankets and medicines. The Red Cross is watching the load. To think that there are at least one bullet in trucks - is from the category of "conspiracy theories".
 
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This convoy of 280 trucks is carrying food, blankets and medicines. The Red Cross is watching the load. To think that there are at least one bullet in trucks - is from the category of "conspiracy theories".

Well I am receiving reports that Russia is now in intervention mode. There are military vehicles with this convoy. Most likely the events at Gorlivka ,the threat to the chemical plant is going to trigger russian intervention soon.
 
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