Ukraine and Russian leaders meet, after soldiers captured

Pro-Russian rebels in eastern Ukraine paraded dozens of captured soldiers before a jeering crowd on August 24 in a bid to mock Kyiv's Independence Day celebrations. AFP Photo

The presidents of Russia and Ukraine hold key talks Tuesday with little hopes for a breakthrough in the conflict pitting the former Soviet state against pro-Russian separatist rebels.
      
Kyiv ratcheted up tensions by announcing hours ahead of the talks it had captured 10 Russian soldiers on its territory, while Washington accused Moscow of escalating the conflict with repeat military incursions.        

Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko and Russian leader Vladimir Putin are due to meet in Minsk alongside top EU officials and the leaders from Kazakhstan and Belarus, in a bid to defuse tensions that some fear could trigger direct hostilities between Russia and Ukraine.        

US National Security Adviser Susan Rice slammed Moscow for "military incursions" into Ukraine using artillery, air defence systems, tanks and troops, representing a "significant escalation" in the conflict.
      
"Repeated Russian incursions into Ukraine unacceptable. Dangerous and inflammatory," she wrote on Twitter.
                      
Kyiv's security service said paratroopers from Russia's 98th airborne division were captured about 50 kilometres (30 miles) southeast of the main rebel stronghold of Donetsk.
      
Ukrainian media on Tuesday aired footage purporting to show the captured Russian paratroopers confessing to entering Ukraine in armoured convoys.        

"We travelled here in columns not along the roads but across the fields," says one of the men dressed in camouflage.
      
Kyiv has long accused Moscow of stoking the separatist insurgency raging in its east, but this is the first time Ukrainian authorities have claimed to have...

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