Ukraine truce deal shaken by artillery attack

Ukraine truce deal shaken by artillery attack

Ukrainian government forces have been hit by an artillery attack near the port of Mariupol in eastern Ukraine, in the first significant violation of a ceasefire declared little more than 24 hours earlier.

The Reuters news agency early on Sunday said an industrial facility, a lorry and a petrol station were set ablaze in an area within the limits of Mariupol, the scene of fierce fighting up until a ceasefire was agreed on Friday.

Reuters described the attack as "prolonged".

"There has been an artillery attack. We received a number of impacts, we have no information about casualties," a Ukrainian officer told the agency at the scene.

John Wendle, reporting for Al Jazeera from near Mariupol, said heavy caliber machine guns had also been heard near the city, and he had unconfirmed reports of civilian casualties.

He said pictures he had seen showed civilian cars destroyed in the attack.

Reuters also reported that lorries carrying pro-government militia volunteers and tanks and armored personnel carriers were seen heading towards the site of the attack.

The city of 500,000 people on the Sea of Azov near the Russian border had been the scene of fierce fighting between Ukrainian government forces and pro-Russian separatists before the ceasefire deal.

Earlier Saturday, the presidents of Ukraine and Russia said the ceasefire was mostly holding.

A statement from the Ukrainian president, Petro Poroshenko, said he and Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin discussed steps "for giving the ceasefire a stable character'' in a telephone conversation Saturday.

Europe's OSCE security watchdog approved the ceasefire in Minsk on Friday as part of a peace agreement that also includes an exchange of prisoners of war and establishing a humanitarian corridor for refugees and aid.

PHOTO CAPTION

A Ukrainian helicopter flies near a military camp in Kramatorsk town, near Slaviansk, Ukraine, 06 September 2014. A ceasefire in eastern Ukraine was largely holding although militant separatists and the government accused each other of violating the truce.


Aljazeera

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