Kiev hopes for stalled truce talks despite separatist vow to push offensive
Diplomatic efforts to extend a ceasefire between pro-Russian rebels and government forces agreed in September continue with meeting scheduled in the Belarus capital Minsk

Kiev’s pro-Western leaders hope to hold truce talks on Saturday with pro-Russian separatists despite the rebels’ vow to push their latest offensive in eastern Ukraine if the negotiations should fail.
The urgent new round of talks in Minsk that had been agreed for Friday under pressure from European envoys was postponed due to disagreements over who should represent the rebel camp.
Kiev said it expected to send its envoy, former Ukrainian president Leonid Kuchma, to Minsk on Saturday for the talks – formally backed by the Kremlin – aimed at reinforcing a tattered September truce.
“We expect to sign a document that reinforces the Minsk Memorandum [of September] and the peace plan of presidents [Petro] Poroshenko and [Vladimir] Putin,” Kuchma told the Interfax-Ukraine news agency.
“Our main goal is to ensure that the [September] agreement is implemented,” he told Ukrainian reporters earlier of the talks mediated by European and Russian envoys.