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OSCE to Start 24/7 Monitoring of Border Crossings in Rostov Region

© Sputnik / Sergei Pivovarov / Go to the mediabankOSCE mission arrives in Rostov-on-Don to work at border checkpoints.
OSCE mission arrives in Rostov-on-Don to work at border checkpoints. - Sputnik International
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A group of OSCE observers will start round-the-clock monitoring of Russia’s Gukovo and Donetsk crossing points on the border with Ukraine on Wednesday, the mission’s head Paul Picard said at the meeting with the Rostov’s regional authorities.

ROSTOV-ON-DON, July 30 (RIA Novosti) - A group of OSCE observers will start round-the-clock monitoring of Russia’s Gukovo and Donetsk crossing points on the border with Ukraine on Wednesday, the mission’s head Paul Picard said at the meeting with the Rostov’s regional authorities.

“Our mission is to observe the activity at two border crossing points, namely the border crossing point of Gukovo and the border crossing point. This is what we will be starting from today,” Picard said, stressing that the work as the decision was made only last Thursday.

Picard added that the observers would be divided into small groups that will be constantly present at the checkpoints. Picard also said that the mission would assess the transfer of people across the border, as well as the events happening there. The mission will stay in the region for at least three months.

Rostov Region's Deputy Governor Vadim Artyomov told the members of the mission that during the conflict in Donbas region, Rostov came under fire from Ukraine 16 times and that 208 Ukrainians are in the region’s hospitals.

“Over this year, more than 250,000 people arrived from Ukraine, 41,000 of them are accommodated in Rostov region, including 13,000 children,” Artyomov said.

The first group of OSCE monitors arrived on Tuesday and the remaining members are expected to arrive in the days to come.

In total, the OSCE mission will include 19 members from eight countries, namely France, Great Britain, Hungary, Moldova, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Kazakhstan and Ukraine.

Earlier this month, Moscow invited the OSCE to assess the situation on the Russian-Ukrainian border, which has been hit multiple times by Ukrainian artillery. On July 13, shells exploded in the Russian city of Donetsk in Rostov Region, killing one civilian and injuring two more.

Russia’s Rostov Region borders Ukraine’s eastern regions, the scene of fighting between the Ukrainian Army and independence forces refusing to recognize the legitimacy of the new government. Hundreds of people, including civilians have died in both regions over the past few months.

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