Will the Russian aid convoy to Ukraine enter without Ukrainian government permission?
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A Russian convoy of 280 trucks carrying humanitarian aid left on Tuesday 12 August 2014 from near Moscow for eastern Ukraine. The 1000 km journey to Ukraine's eastern regions will take a couple of days, probably to a border crossing point near Kharkiv. At the border the convoy shall be transfered to the International Committee of the Red Cross. [1]
A Russian government speaker and and a Ukranian presidential aide cited exclusively humanitarian intentions whereas U.S., French and Australian government speakers expressed concern that the deliveries might be a covert operation to help anti-government rebel fighters [1] or even could be the prelude to invasion [2]
On Wednesday, 13 August the convoy resumed its trip after stopping in Voronezh overnight. Menawhile, official Ukrainian speakers are sending uncoordinated messages about its stance regarding the convoy, ranging from outright rejection (Interior Minister), qualified acceptance of Red Cross intermediation (Prime Minister) to just a a Red Cross inspection (unnamed militry spokesman). [3]
Thursday 14 August sees only 100 lorries continue towards the border, amidst the uncertainty. A Red Cross offical will fly to Kiev and Moscow on a diplomatic mission to clarify border crossing procedure. [4]
Sources
[1] Ukraine says may block Russian aid convoy - Reuters, 12 August 2014
[2] Russian aid convoy heads for Ukraine amid doubts over lorries' contents - The Guardian, 12 August 2014
[3] Ukraine Sends Mixed Messages on Plan for Russian Convoy - Wall Street Journal, 13 August 2014
[4] Ukraine crisis: Russia aid convoy heads for border - BBC, 14 August 2014