Ukraine: Putin aide brands Poroshenko 'Nazi' ahead of EU deal Published duration 27 June 2014 Related Topics Ukraine conflict

media caption Adviser to Vladimir Putin Sergei Glazyev says Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko is a Nazi

A senior adviser to Russian President Vladimir Putin has lashed out at Ukraine's president ahead of the signing of a controversial EU deal.

Sergei Glazyev said Petro Poroshenko was a "Nazi" and his endorsement of the deal was "illegitimate".

Mr Poroshenko is expected to sign the full association agreement at the EU summit in Brussels later.

A shaky ceasefire in eastern Ukraine, where pro-Russian rebels are fighting government forces, is also due to end.

The pact - which would bind Ukraine more closely to the West both economically and politically - is at the heart of the crisis in the country and is strongly opposed by Russia.

Mr Poroshenko's predecessor Viktor Yanukovych refused to sign the deal and protests led to his overthrow.

After this Russia annexed Ukraine's Crimea region and pro-Russia separatists in eastern regions declared independence, claiming that extremists had taken power in Kiev.

In another development early on Friday, rebels released four international observers captured more than a month ago.

Alexander Borodai, head of the self-styled Donetsk People's Republic, said the members of the Vienna-based Organisation for the Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) had been freed as a goodwill gesture.

"We don't expect anything in return - we freed them without any pre-conditions," he said.

The OSCE said it remains concerned about four other observers captured at about the same time.

image copyright Getty Images image caption Pro-Russian militants have occupied government buildings in eastern Ukraine

'Historic day'

Political parts of the association agreement, aimed at forging closer ties with the EU, were signed by Ukraine's interim government in March.

Mr Poroshenko previously announced he would sign the crucial trade and economic relations portion of the pact on Friday, along with Georgia and Moldova.

And on his arrival in Brussels, he hailed "a historic day, the most important day since independence" in 1991 which offered his country "an absolutely new perspective".

But earlier Mr Glazyev, Mr Putin's presidential adviser on regional economic integration, told the BBC: "Europe is trying to push Ukraine to sign this agreement by force.

"They organised [a] military coup in Ukraine, they helped Nazis to come to power. This Nazi government is bombing the largest region in Ukraine."

Asked if he believed Mr Poroshenko was a Nazi he replied: "Of course."

Analysis: Steve Rosenberg, BBC News Moscow

Sergei Glazyev is not an official presidential spokesman but it's still an astonishing outburst from a man who is a senior presidential adviser, and it reflects the general feeling of irritation or anger in Moscow that Ukraine, Moldova and Georgia are signing historic free trade deals today with the EU.

Moscow has economic concerns here. Russia fears that once the free trade deals are signed then European companies could use Ukraine, Georgia and Moldova to flood Russia with cheaper goods, hitting Russian manufacturers.

More pressing for Moscow are the geopolitical concerns here - the whole idea of former Soviet states, countries that Moscow still views as being within its sphere of influence, drifting towards Europe and one day possibly becoming part of the EU - that really grates with Moscow, particularly in the case of Ukraine.

He also warned against EU euphoria.

"I think after the signing of the agreement with EU, [the] European public will be... surprised when this Nazi Frankenstein, which was born by the Euro bureaucrats and some politicians, will knock on the European countries' doors," he said.

He said Mr Poroshenko was an "illegitimate" president because parts of Ukraine did not vote in May's elections.

His claims come despite President Putin engaging with the Ukrainian leader on peace negotiations.

He also said that Mr Poroshenko had no constitutional right to sign the treaty, which would damage the Ukrainian economy.

Free trade with the EU would come at the expense of free trade with Russia, he added, and Ukrainian goods did not conform to European technical standards.

Fighting is said to have continued in some areas of eastern Ukraine despite a temporary ceasefire this week.

image copyright AFP image caption Mr Poroshenko was elected president in May on a pro-EU platform after six months of political turmoil

Talks on extending the truce in in the Donetsk and Luhansk regions are also set to take place on Friday.

More than 420 people have been killed in fighting between pro-Russia rebels and government forces in eastern Ukraine since mid-April, the UN estimates.

Russia denies it has allowed militants and heavy weaponry to cross its border into eastern Ukraine.