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Putin ‘may join future Ukraine talks’: Germany

Germany said on Wednesday it could not rule out Russian President Vladimir Putin would take part in a future round of talks over conflict-torn eastern Ukraine after speculation that Western leaders were snubbing him.

Putin 'may join future Ukraine talks': Germany
The Russian President is currently attending to pressing engagements at the bottom of the sea. Photo: DPA

Chancellor Angela Merkel is hosting talks with France's President Francois Hollande and Ukrainian leader Petro Poroshenko on Monday, and analysts said the conspicuous absence of Putin underlined that relations were deteriorating as new violence flares in eastern Ukraine.

The four leaders last met in Minsk in February when a truce deal was signed, but they have also regularly held telephone conversations over the conflict.

Merkel's spokeswoman Christiane Wirtz said on Wednesday that although Putin would not join the huddle in Berlin, it was possible that the Russian strongman could attend future talks.

“I cannot rule out that such a meeting would be held but I cannot confirm it,” Wirtz told reporters.

Violence in eastern Ukraine this week has sparked a new diplomatic flareup between Moscow – accused by the West of aiding and abetting Ukraine's pro-Russia rebels – and Western powers which want to prop up Kiev's new pro-European leaders against what they view as Russian aggression.

Both Kiev and rebels controlling parts of Ukraine's industrial east reported the deaths of at least 10 soldiers and civilians on Monday in the worst bloodshed in over a month.

SEE ALSO: Ukraine again 'explosive', Germany warns

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UKRAINE

Germany to support defence of Polish airspace

Germany on Monday said it had reached an agreement to help Poland protect its skies following a deadly rocket strike close to the border with Ukraine.

Germany to support defence of Polish airspace

Berlin would “send Patriot anti-aircraft systems to Poland and support the securing of Polish airspace with Eurofighter (jets)”, Defence Minister Christine Lambrecht said in a statement.

READ ALSO: Germany to buy F-35 fighter jets in military shopping spree

Two people were killed last week when a missile landed in the Polish village of Przewodow, six kilometres (four miles) from the Ukrainian border.

Warsaw and NATO have said the explosion was likely caused by a Ukrainian air-defence missile launched to intercept a Russian barrage, but that Moscow was ultimately to blame because it started the conflict.

Before the deal was agreed, Polish Defence Minister Mariusz Blaszczak said he “welcomed the German proposal with satisfaction”.

Blaszczak said on Twitter he would propose for the systems to be “stationed close to the border with Ukraine”.

Germany has already sent Patriot anti-aircraft units to Slovakia, where Berlin hopes to keep them deployed for longer than currently planned.

The air-defence systems should remain in Slovakia “until the end of 2023 and potentially even beyond”, Lambrecht told the Rheinische Post daily.

“It is our utmost responsibility that NATO does not become a participant in this conflict,” while strengthening its air defences, she said.

READ ALSO: Germany and Spain to train Ukraine troops under EU programme

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