Ukraine crisis: Leaders agree peace roadmap
A deal aimed at ending the fighting in eastern Ukraine has been agreed, following marathon talks in Belarus.
The leaders of Russia, Ukraine, Germany and France announced that a ceasefire would begin on 15 February.
The deal also involves the withdrawal of heavy weapons from conflict areas, but some issues remain to be settled.
The pro-Russian rebels in eastern Ukraine have signed the agreement. Thousands of people have died in almost a year of fighting in the region.
French President Francois Hollande said he and German Chancellor Angela Merkel would ask their European Union partners to support the deal at a summit later on Thursday.
The agreement - reached after 17 hours of negotiations in Minsk - includes:
- Ceasefire to begin on 15 February
- Heavy weapons to be pulled out: Beginning on 17 Fen and completed in two weeks
- All prisoners to be released; amnesty for those involved in fighting
- Withdrawal of all foreign armed formations, weapons and mercenaries from Ukrainian territory. Disarmament of all illegal groups
- Ukraine to allow resumption of normal life in rebel areas, by lifting restrictions
- Constitutional reform to enable decentralisation for rebel regions by the end of 2015
- Ukraine control of border with Russia to be completed by the end of 2015
The BBC's Richard Galpin in Minsk says the deal is very similar to a ceasefire agreed last September, which unravelled very quickly.
Merkel said there was now a "glimmer of hope" but big hurdles remained.
Key unresolved issues include the status of Debaltseve, a government-held town surrounded by rebels that has been the focus of fierce fighting in recent days.
Further talks will also be held on self-rule in parts of Donetsk and Luhansk separatist regions.
Putin told Russian television: "It wasn't the best night for me, but it's a good morning."
Poroshenko - who had accused Russia of making "unacceptable" demands - said that "despite tension and pressure" Ukraine had not succumbed to "ultimatums".
The separatist leader in the Luhansk region, Igor Plotnitskiy, welcomed the agreement.
"We hope that thanks to our efforts today Ukraine will change and stop firing at civilians, hospitals and socially important facilities," he said.
Paul Kirby, BBC News online Europe editor
If the Minsk ceasefire failed last September, then how is this different and could it work?
If both sides follow the deal, heavy weaponry will be hauled further back from the front line - not 15km (nine miles) as before, but from 50km (30 miles) to 140km for longer-range weapons. It would take civilians in Donetsk beyond the range of big guns, as well as residents far away from the front line in government-controlled Kramatorsk. The new ceasefire line is the same as the old, so the rebels would lose some of their gains but they would keep Donetsk airport.
But there is no deal yet on the fate of Debaltseve, a major town where government forces are under siege and that could prove significant.
Ukraine is promised its international border back - a major sticking point - but only after local elections in the east, and after a comprehensive deal on decentralisation of the rebel regions of Donetsk and Luhansk. There is much that can go wrong before that.
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