DHAKA: Russian president Vladimir Putin has said war with neighboring Ukraine is ‘unlikely’, in an interview for Russian television.
Putin also stressed his support for the recent Minsk ceasefire deal as the best way to stabilise eastern Ukraine.
Ukraine says Russian troops have been fighting in Ukraine. Putin repeated denials that this was the case.
Foreign ministers from Ukraine, Russia, France and Germany are meeting in Paris on Tuesday to discuss the ceasefire, reports the BBC.
On Monday, Ukraine’s military said rebel shelling had prevented them withdrawing heavy weapons from the front line.
In his interview - his first extended comments since the ceasefire deal was agreed on 12 February - Putin was asked if there was a real threat of war, given the situation in eastern Ukraine.
‘I think that such an apocalyptic scenario is unlikely and I hope this will never happen,’ he said.
Putin said that if the Minsk agreement was implemented, eastern Ukraine would ‘gradually stabilise’.
‘Europe is just as interested in that as Russia. No-one wants conflict on the edge of Europe, especially armed conflict,’ he said.
BDST: 1214 HRS, FEB 24, 2015