The UN has reported a major spike in civilian casualties due to fighting in Ukraine. DW spoke with the OSCE's monitoring mission to find out why the conflict has taken another violent turn and if there is a solution.
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UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Zeid Ra'ad al-Hussein this week announced that fighting in eastern Ukraine prompted a surge in civilian casualties in June and July, marking the highest number since August 2015.
The office of the high commissioner documented 69 civilian casualties in June, including 12 dead and 57 injured, "nearly double the figure" of the month before. In July, the toll rose to 73 civilian casualties, including eight dead and 65 injured.
"The escalation of hostilities and the accompanying civilian casualties in eastern Ukraine over the last two months are very worrying," al-Hussein said in a statement.
"Civilians are once again having to flee to improvised bomb shelters in their basements, sometimes overnight, with increasing frequency - the price of the ceasefire violations is too high for the women, men and children in eastern Ukraine," he noted.
At least 9,500 people have been killed in the armed separatist insurgency that erupted in 2014. The conflict followed pro-democracy protests in the capital Kyiv, which effectively led to the ouster of Kremlin-backed Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych.
The fighting has sparked a humanitarian crisis by internally displacing 1 million people and directly affecting over 500,000 children, according to the UN.
The UN's chief human rights officials implored Ukrainian forces and rebel groups to take the "necessary precautions" to protect civilian lives.
"We urge all sides to respect the ceasefire provisions, to remove combatants and weapons from civilian areas, and to scrupulously implement the provisions of the Minsk agreements," he added.
The dangers of proximity
Minsk II, an agreement signed last year by members of the international community and representatives of conflicting parties, aimed to alleviate tensions in the separatist regions of the east.
The agreement aimed to have both parties of the conflict withdraw heavy artillery from the contact line in a bid to bolster the foundation of a bilateral ceasefire.
But violence has continued to fuel the conflict, with human rights organizations, including Amnesty International, accusing government forces and separatists of war crimes.
Alexander Hug, chief deputy monitor of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe's (OSCE) Special Monitoring Mission in Ukraine, told DW that a pivotal reason for continued violence is the proximity of conflicting parties.
"A major reason for this is the close proximity of the conflicting forces in all of the locations where there is still fighting. They're often as close as 50 meters to each other, and that leads to tensions in the area, with these tensions often translating to raging battles," Hug said.
"These battlegrounds are not on an open field, they're often - if not in all cases - on the outskirts of towns and villages, and that draws civilians into the conflict when fighting erupts," he added.
Ukraine stunted by conflict
Despite an official ceasefire, continued shelling keeps Ukraine in a volatile pseudo-war and leaves the country's East economically and politically paralyzed. Photographer Christopher Bobyn reports from the frontline.
Image: DW/C. Bobyn
A room with a view
Near Mariupol, a Ukrainian marine peers at separatist positions through artillery damage in a former sanatorium, now a frontline outpost. Shelling occurs daily despite a ceasefire. Marines along the Sea of Avoz are tasked with keeping pro-Russian separatists from Mariupol, which would provide their self-declared republics with profitable industry and a land bridge between Russia and Crimea.
Image: DW/C. Bobyn
Paradise lost
A marine patrols in the remains of Shirokino, five kilometers from Mariupol. A holiday town on the beaches of the Sea of Avoz, it was leveled by fighting in August. The town was a source of local revenue to Mariupol, as it swelled with thousands of tourists every summer. It now marks the frontline held by Ukraine along the Mariupol city limits, with separatists a mere 600 meters down the beach.
Image: DW/C. Bobyn
Over the top
A series of WWI-like trenches make-up the marine station "Tiger," on the outskirts of Mariupol. Continued shelling and sniper fire along this line keeps marines in a constant state of preparedness, grinding nerves while they reinforce their positions for a drawn-out conflict. The earth and wood trenches and bunkers are not just defenses; they are soldiers' homes during their time on the front.
Image: DW/C. Bobyn
Manning the front
A marine shaves on an autumn morning on the Donetsk front, 500 meters (550 yards) from pro-Russian separatist positions. Ukraine has conscripted thousands through its mobilization act, swelling its military ranks to 280,000 personnel from just 130,000 in December 2014. Now men from across the social spectrum man a 200-kilometer (125-mile) front stretching from the coast into the Ukrainian Steppe.
Image: DW/C. Bobyn
From TV to trenches
Alla, 31, an actor turned military volunteer, works with a civil-military cooperation unit on the Mariupol front. The unit delivers aid to the civilians still living in the war zone and tends to marines with goods and medical treatment. Women are not subject to Ukraine's mobilization draft and must volunteer: "My friend was an officer and said I should serve my country in a time of war. I agreed."
Image: DW/C. Bobyn
A break from war
With an anti-tank RPG at her bedside, Alla checks Facebook after a day on the line and showering with bottled water. She is the only woman living with 20 other male soldiers in an occupied holiday home on the Sea of Avoz. Her comrades built her a makeshift private room from bookshelves and shower curtains: "They're good boys, my friends. I trust them."
Image: DW/C. Bobyn
International assistance
Volunteer Canadian doctors operate on wounded Ukrainian troops in Kyiv's Military Hospital. A group of 40 doctors came from Canada to perform complex surgeries beyond the technical ability of local surgeons. Citizens of Canada and other countries with large Ukrainian diaspora have been crucial in filling the financial and technical gaps of Ukraine's war effort.
Image: DW/C. Bobyn
Scars of war
Andriy, 28, a conscript from Kyiv, was injured by a mine explosion in the Donetsk region. He waits for plastic surgery by Canadian doctors to reduce his scars and remove the shrapnel in his face. The shards are so big he can stick magnets to his cheek and forehead. Before the war he had a business working with satellites. He must finish his 12 months in the military before he can return to work.
Image: DW/C. Bobyn
The home front
Katja sits in her Kyiv flat, where she now lives alone with her daughters, two-year-old Tasha and nine-year-old Anja. Her husband was drafted and serves on the Mariupol front. "It's horrible for me here without him," she says. "I don't need a big house or lots of money, but I need my husband here to raise his daughters."
Image: DW/C. Bobyn
Home away from home
Katja's husband Maxim, 29, sits on his bed in an underground earth and wood bunker on the frontline outside Mariupol, his home for the last three months. Before mobilization he imported clothes from Germany for his three clothing stores. They are now closed without him in Kyiv to run the business, and he will need to rebuild the stores and contacts after his year of conscripted duty is over.
Image: DW/C. Bobyn
An illusive peace
A government soldier mans a checkpoint in Donetsk. Despite the ceasefire, the peace is broken daily by shelling and sniper fire - a war without flashy battles, but rather muddy attrition, with reinforced positions and indiscriminate fire, rendering eastern Ukraine uninhabitable. The state of pseudo-war has left the nation of 45 million in economic and political paralysis.
Image: DW/C. Bobyn
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'Sustainable ceasefire'
Hug proposed three initiatives to ensure de-escalation, namely adherence to the ceasefire with accountability for individuals responsible for violating the cessation of hostilities, removal of military equipment and troops near civilian areas, and for both sides to separate from each other to a distance in which engagement is less possible.
One thing that would really help the situation is to "move the sides apart to a distance where engagement is less possible. Disengagement, or a separation of forces, is a very efficient tool that has also been used in conflicts to create a sustainable ceasefire," Hug said.
Meanwhile, the OSCE reported several instances in which their monitors had been threatened or prevented from doing their work on the ground, while the monitoring mission's unmanned aerial vehicles (UAV) have been targeted by artillery.
"It's also important to realize that if we can't monitor, there will be no verification. Without verification, there will be very little trust built, and without trust, there can't be disengagement, there can't be normalization," Hug said.
"So at the beginning of this equation stands the monitoring activity of the OSCE's special monitoring mission," he concluded.