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Ukraine appeals for help against Russia

Avdiivka : Ukraine's president appealed for more global pressure against Russia on Thursday as Moscow-backed rebels and government forces clashed around a frontline town in an  upsurge of fighting that has claimed a reported 25 lives.

The sworn foes have been exchanging mortar and rocket fire near the flashpoint eastern town of Avdiivka that sits just north of the pro-Russian rebels' de facto capital of Donetsk.

The outburst of violence since Sunday has reignited fears of full-scale warfare returning to eastern Ukraine after a relative lull in 33 months of bloodshed in the European Union's backyard.

The Avdiivka shelling left more than 20,000 people without heating or water in freezing winter weather and authorities scrambling to provide relief.

The escalation in fighting has sharpened attention on a conflict that had slipped from recent focus despite having claimed more than 10,000  lives.

The United States' UN ambassador Nikki Haley on Thursday condemned Russia's "aggressive actions" in Ukraine.

The fresh fighting comes at a potential watershed moment for Ukraine as it seeks to maintain US support despite US President Donald Trump's bid to mend ties with Russia's Vladimir Putin.

Moscow and Kiev have traded blame over who started the latest round of violence. AFP reporters have witnessed the rebels on the attack.

"The world should be more actively putting pressure on Russia in order to end the shelling," Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko said in a statement.

The Ukrainian army's general staff also convened a meeting of the G7 group of global powers representatives and the UN Security Council members' ambassadors to Kiev focused on the latest violence.

"Moscow is putting Avdiivka on the brink of a humanitarian catastrophe," Poroshenko said.

But Russian President Vladimir Putin countered that the latest fighting was "provoked by the Ukrainian side".

The seemingly irreconcilable differences are rooted in Kiev's worries that Putin is trying to stamp his authority on eastern Ukraine to give him leverage over Trump on other global issues.

NATO chief Jens Stoltenberg did not blame Russia directly but said that Moscow had "considerable influence" over the militia forces now on the attack in east Ukraine.

Moscow denies accusations from Kiev and its allies that it sparked the war in 2014 and has sent in troops to keep Ukraine under its thumb after its tilt towards the West.