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NATO urges Russia to prod Ukraine rebels to honour truce
By Lachlan CARMICHAEL
Brussels (AFP) Dec 19, 2016


China ends diplomatic freeze with Norway after Nobel row
Oslo (AFP) Dec 19, 2016 - Norway and China announced Monday the resumption of diplomatic relations, six years after Beijing froze ties with Oslo over the awarding of the Nobel Peace Prize to a Chinese dissident.

The announcement means talks can now resume on a free trade pact between mineral-rich Norway and China, the world's second-biggest economy.

Diplomatic relations -- and the trade talks -- were frozen after the awarding of the Nobel Peace Prize in October 2010 to human rights activist Liu Xiaobo, imprisoned in his own country by authorities who consider him a "criminal."

But during a surprise visit to Beijing by Norwegian Foreign Minister Borge Brende on Monday, the two nations issued a joint declaration announcing they were unfreezing ties.

"The Norwegian government reiterates its commitment to the one-China policy, fully respects China's sovereignty and territorial integrity, attaches high importance to China's core interests and major concerns, will not support actions that undermine them, and will do its best to avoid any future damage to the bilateral relations," the statement said.

Human rights issues were not mentioned in the two-page document.

"We haven't made any concessions but we have engaged in confidence-building work over a long period of time," Prime Minister Erna Solberg told reporters in Oslo.

Her Chinese counterpart Li Kegiang, quoted by the Xinhua news agency, meanwhile said China "hopes to work together with Norway to open a new chapter for bilateral ties, and push forward a sustained, healthy and stable growth of relations."

According to Norwegian media, China had demanded an official apology but Norway's government repeatedly refused, insisting that the Nobel Committee was an independent body free to make its own choices.

"Norway deeply reflected upon the reasons why bilateral mutual trust was harmed, and had conscientious, solemn consultations with China about how to improve bilateral relations," Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi said.

Liu Xiaobo has been serving an 11-year sentence since 2009 for "subversion", after co-writing a text calling for democracy in China.

Solberg admitted that Norway's economy had suffered as a result of the spat with the Asian giant.

"Even if our trade with China has not decreased, we have not been part of the enormous upswing from China in the same way many other countries have," she said.

Salmon exports to China, one of Norway's biggest export items, suffered as a result of the row, dealing a heavy blow to the industry.

On Monday, stocks of salmon producers were up on the Oslo stock exchange.

NATO on Monday urged Russia to use its clout with insurgents in eastern Ukraine to make a troubled truce stick, as the two sides held talks to defuse the worst tensions since the Cold War.

But NATO said gaps with Moscow remained wide as the alliance also raised "particular concern" over Russia's use of snap military exercises near eastern Europe that it says fuels instability.

"Allies called on Russia to use its considerable influence on the militants to meet their commitments in full," NATO chief Jens Stoltenberg said in a statement after the ambassador-level talks ended in Brussels.

Under the Minsk agreements in 2014 and 2015, Moscow agreed to a ceasefire in Ukraine and to halt support for separatist pro-Russian rebels that have carved out an enclave in the east of the country.

Provisions in the ceasefire deal call for the withdrawal of heavy weaponry from the regions of Donetsk and Lugansk.

"Allies raised particular concern over the excessive use of snap exercises. These are destabilising," Stoltenberg said.

He added that many participants in the talks called for updating the OSCE's Vienna Document on military exercises and activities.

Russian ambassador to NATO Alexander Grushko repeated accusations against Kiev, saying it was breaching the peace agreements.

"We pointed at the violations of the ceasefire by the Ukrainian military forces, their use of artillery systems forbidden by the Minsk agreements and the presence of heavy equipment in 'the security zone'," he said.

"We called on the... members to exert their influence on the Kiev authorities to encourage them to proceed from the de facto sabotage of the political process to real actions."

- Surge in tensions -

In August Russia conducted a large-scale snap drill, putting its troops on full combat readiness in military districts bordering Ukraine and the Baltic States.

Tensions between Russia and Ukraine surged over the summer after Moscow accused Kiev of attempting armed incursions into Crimea.

Ukraine and its Western allies have been locked in a bitter confrontation with Russia since Moscow seized the strategic region from Kiev in March 2014.

The third NATO Russia Council this year did not appear to bridge the divide -- Stoltenberg said "our meeting does not indicate a return to business as usual."

The NRC, which brings together ambassadors from the 28 NATO member countries and Russia, met regularly until the Ukraine crisis plunged relations with Moscow into the deep freeze in 2014.

US-led NATO has suspended all practical cooperation with Russia over its role in Ukraine but Stoltenberg has said political channels of communication have always remained open.

He says maintaining such contacts was crucial to avoiding any misunderstandings with Moscow at a time of increased tensions.

Stoltenberg gave no specific reason for convening the NRC on Monday but there has been growing speculation a meeting was on the cards, stoked by US president-elect Donald Trump's more conciliatory approach to Moscow.

Grushko meanwhile said the "situation in European security continues to degrade.

"The main negative factor is the ongoing strengthening of NATO's eastern flank, deployment of the US and Allied forces and equipment, reinforcement of military infrastructure along the Russian borders," he said.

Meanwhile, the European Union on Monday extended for another six months damaging economic sanctions against Russia over the Ukraine crisis.


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