Col. Andriy Lysenko told a
press briefing in Kiev that there are more casualties but Ukrainian
forces are being prevented from recovering the other victims by
"fighting in the area which is still controlled by the separatists."
The Ukrainian military said Monday that women and children were among those killed in the attack on the caravan of refugees.
The civilians were trying
to escape fighting between pro-Russian rebels and the Ukrainian
military but were not in an established humanitarian safety corridor
when they came under fire, a military representative said.
Lysenko said Tuesday that
the convoy was traveling from Luhansk to Lutuhyne, which is controlled
by the Ukrainian government, when it was attacked.
Militants are blocking access to the area around the destroyed convoy and are shooting at all vehicles in the area, he said.
Meanwhile, fierce fighting continues for control of the city of Luhansk, a stronghold for pro-Russian rebels.
The Ukrainian military has retaken one district, Lysenko said, and there is street fighting in the city center.
Aid convoy halted
Humanitarian agencies
say thousands of people in the Luhansk and neighboring Donetsk regions
don't have access to water, electricity and proper medical aid.
Ukrainian officials
acknowledged Sunday that a convoy of more than 260 Russian vehicles on
the border is, in fact, carrying humanitarian aid.
But Lysenko said the aid
had not started to move as of Tuesday morning, since the rebel Donetsk
People's Republic has not given the necessary safety guarantees to the
International Committee of the Red Cross.
A small group from the
ICRC has been sent to Luhansk to evaluate the situation there and assess
how to proceed with the cargo delivery, he said.
As of Tuesday, 77 cities and villages in Donetsk region are without electricity.
The convoy initially
sparked fears that Russia was trying to use a humanitarian convoy as a
cover for sending in more aid and weapons for pro-Russian rebels in
eastern Ukraine, which Russia and the rebels denied.
Diplomatic moves
Efforts to find a diplomatic solution to the crisis in eastern Ukraine continue.
Ukrainian President
Petro Poroshenko spoke by phone Monday with German Chancellor Angela
Merkel, his office said. That conversation followed a meeting in Berlin
on Sunday of the foreign ministers of Germany, Ukraine, France and
Russia.
"We discussed the question of how we can find ways to reach an urgently needed cease-fire in eastern Ukraine," German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier said. "We discussed the question of how we can improve and optimize controls at the Russian-Ukrainian border."
Russia's Foreign
Ministry said "some progress" had been made on issues including ending
the hostilities, border control, the delivery of humanitarian aid and
creating the conditions for a political settlement.
The ongoing fighting --
sparked by a political crisis over whether Ukraine would seek closer
ties with Europe or Russia -- has left more than 2,000 people dead and
just under 5,000 wounded in eastern Ukraine since mid-April, according
to estimates from U.N. officials.

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