The EU has agreed a €1.8bn (£1.3bn; $2bn) loan to Ukraine – described as a landmark deal for a non-EU member.
The agreement was signed at an EU summit in Riga, Latvia, with the leaders of six post-Soviet nations.
The loan aims to help cash-strapped Ukraine implement economic reforms, as fighting with pro-Russian rebels in the east has taken a heavy toll.
Ukraine is under pressure from the EU and other international lenders to curb corruption and liberalise the economy.
In other developments on Friday:
Amnesty International released a report, saying it had found evidence that both sides in the Ukrainian conflict were torturing prisoners, and that the rebels were conducting summary executions
Russia said it was taking all necessary steps to free two of its citizens recently captured in Ukraine. The two men earlier confessed to being members of the Russian armed forces, to mediators of the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE).
Ukraine said three of its soldiers had been killed and another 12 injured in the past 24 hours in the east of the country
€200m grants
In Riga, the EU also pledged €200m in grants to Ukraine, Georgia and Moldova, which have signed association agreements with the 28-nation bloc.
The other “Eastern Partnership” countries are Armenia, Azerbaijan and Belarus.
Georgia, Moldova and Ukraine are pushing for full integration with the EU, while the other three countries prefer limited co-operation with the bloc.
In addition, Armenia and Belarus are members of the Russian-led Eurasian Economic Union, seen by some analysts as a rival project to the EU.
The Riga summit declaration criticised Russia for its annexation of Ukraine’s Crimea peninsula last year.
“The acts against Ukraine and the events in Georgia since 2014 have shown that the fundamental principles of sovereignty and territorial integrity within internationally recognised borders cannot be taken for granted in the 21st Century on the European continent,” it said.
“The EU remains committed in its support to the territorial integrity, independence and sovereignty of all its partners.”
The declaration recognised “the sovereign right of each partner freely to choose the level of ambition and the goals to which it aspires” in ties with the EU.
Visa liberalisation plan
At a news conference, European Council President Donald Tusk said he wanted to be as “ambitious as possible” in granting Georgia and Ukraine a visa-free regime, provided key conditions were met. European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker said “enormous progress” had been made on the issue.
Both countries had hoped for a positive decision on the visa issue at the Riga summit, but it will not happen until next year at the earliest.
Last year, Moldova was granted visa-free travel to the EU.
Mr Tusk said the partnership process was a “long haul”. “Nobody promised that the Eastern Partnership would be an automatic way to membership of the EU.”
Ukraine’s crisis erupted in November 2013, when the previous Ukrainian government backed away from closer ties with the EU. The mass protests sparked by that move toppled President Viktor Yanukovych and led to the conflict in the east.
Russian and Ukrainian media comment
Russian state media are sceptical about the Eastern Partnership summit.
The government daily Rossiiskaya Gazeta says the gathering is “so lacking in hope and prospects that it can only be compared to fishing without a bait”.
“It promises nothing, not entry to the EU nor cancellation of visas, but it demands plenty,” says the state-controlled Channel One TV.
Rossiya1 TV adds that the Eastern Partnership scheme has “outlived its usefulness”.
In Ukraine too there is little positive media comment on the summit.
“Ukraine itself brought about the Riga summit’s failure,” says Yevropeyska Pravda website.
It adds that “Kiev only has itself to blame” for not implementing a visa liberalisation action plan with the EU.
Source: BBC News