The report is by Bellingcat, a "citizen investigative journalist" project that's funded in part by a Kickstarter campaign.
Pro-Kyiv military blogger Dmitry Tymchuk says via Facebook that Ukraine's security forces counted 65 attacks by "Russian-terrorist forces" over the past day, nearly half of them in the "direction of Debaltseve Kom" area that's around kilometers from Donetsk.
The U.S. National Security Council has added its voice to the international chorus expressing concern over reports -- including from Kyiv as well as the Special Monitoring Mission of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) -- that "Russian backed and supplied separatists are moving large convoys of weapons and tanks to the front lines of the conflict" in eastern Ukraine.
It calls on Moscow to "honor all of the commitments it made in Minsk, including ending its military supply to the separatists and the withdrawal of all of its troops and weapons from Ukraine."
We are now closing the live blog for today. You can keep abreast of all our ongoing Ukraine coverage here.
Here is an update from RFE/RL's news desk on the United States' reaction to reports of military convoys in eastern Ukraine:
The White House has expressed concern over reports that pro-Russia separatists in eastern Ukraine are moving large convoys of heavy weapons and tanks.
"We are very concerned by intensified fighting in eastern Ukraine, as well as numerous reports... that Russian-backed-and-supplied separatists are moving large convoys of heavy weapons and tanks to the front lines of the conflict," National Security Council spokeswoman Bernadette Meehan said in a statement.
Meehan warned any efforts by the rebels to seize more territory would be a "blatant violation" of a cease-fire agreement signed in Minsk in September.
Meehan urged Moscow to stop supplying the rebels with weapons and withdraw all Russian troops and weapons from eastern Ukraine.
Moscow denies sending arms or troops intro eastern Ukraine.
(AFP)
Meanwhile, as relations with the West deteriorate, Vladimir Putin has been talking up relations with Beijing:
Russian President Vladimir Putin has touted relations with China during a visit to Beijing that comes as his ties with the West are badly strained over the Ukraine crisis.
Putin also oversaw the signing of agreements on a new gas pipeline to energy-hungry China, which Russia is courting as an alternative to Europe for its exports, but the documents are short of a definitive deal and there are questions about how much Beijing is willing to pay.
The trip gave Putin a platform to play up ties with Beijing a day before a November 10-11 Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) summit that was bringing other world leaders, including U.S. President Barack Obama, to the Chinese capital.
Meeting Chinese President Xi Jinping for the tenth time in less than two years, Putin said cooperation between Russia and China is "extremely important for keeping the peace within the framework of international law" and making the world more stable.
He spoke on November 9 amid renewed accusations of direct Russian involvement in the conflict in eastern Ukraine, where the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) said its monitors had seen "convoys of heavy weapons and tanks" on territory held by pro-Russian separatists.
Xi told Putin "we have carefully taken care of the tree of Russian-Chinese relations. Now...it's time to gather fruit."
"No matter the changes on the global arena, we should stick to the chosen path to expand and strengthen our comprehensive mutually fruitful cooperation," Xi said.
Putin and Xi looked on as representatives signed 17 agreements including a memorandum and a "framework agreement" between Russian gas giant Gazprom and the China National Petroleum Corporation (CNPC) on supplies of gas via what the Kremlin calls the "western route."
Russia wants to export at least 30 billion cubic meters (bcm) of gas from deposits in western Siberia to China annually, for 30 years, via a pipeline that would cross the Altai region.
This is on top of an agreement signed in May for state-controlled Gazprom to supply China with 38 bcm a year from deposits in eastern Siberia via a pipeline that would cross into China much further east.
"The western route is becoming the priority for our gas cooperation," said Gazprom CEO Aleksei Miller, adding that details including the timeframe for building the pipeline and rate of increasing supplies have already been determined.
Russian Energy Minister Aleksandr Novak told reporters that "our leaders have just agreed to sign a contract in the first half of next year," while Miller said that the sides had "agreed that we will strive to sign the document soon" but suggested that they had set the end of 2015 as a deadline for a firm deal.
The May agreement was the product of years of tough negotiations, mostly over prices, and questions remain about the details of that deal.
Gazprom sold 161 bcm of gas to Europe in 2013, and soaring tensions with Russia over the conflict in Ukraine have prompted Europe to step up efforts to seek alternative suppliers.
That, in addition to Western sanctions imposed over Russia's actions in Ukraine, have increased Moscow's eagerness to sell as much gas as it can to China.
But China has a choice of suppliers, including Central Asian nations such as Turkmenistan, potentially giving Beijing the upper hand in negotiations with Russia.
(With reporting by Reuters, TASS, Interfax, AFP, and dpa)