Tag: annexation

  • Ukrainian regions annexation: EU to foist new sanctions on Russia

    Following Moscow’s illegitimate annexation of four areas of Ukraine during its months-long conflict, EU member states agreed Wednesday to impose a price cap on Russian oil as well as further sanctions, according to EU officials.

    Diplomats struck the deal in Brussels that also includes curbs on EU exports of aircraft components to Russia and limits on steel imports from the country, according to an official statement from the Czech rotating EU presidency.

    The 27-nation bloc will impose a ban on transporting Russian oil by sea to other countries above the price cap, which the Group of Seven wealthy democracies wants in place by Dec. 5, when an EU embargo on most Russian oil takes effect. A specific price for the future cap has yet to be defined.

    A deal on the price cap was not easy to reach because several EU countries were worried it would damage their shipping industries. More details about the sanctions will be published as soon as Thursday.

    The new package of sanctions was proposed by European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen last week amid heightened security concerns over Russian President Vladimir Putin’s nuclear threats and his annexation of parts of Ukraine.

    “We have moved quickly and decisively,” von der Leyen said as she welcomed the deal. “We will never accept Putin’s sham referenda nor any kind of annexation in Ukraine. We are determined to continue making the Kremlin pay.”

    The new sanctions also include an “extended import ban” on goods such as steel products, wood pulp, paper, machinery and appliances, chemicals, plastic, and cigarettes, the Czech presidency said.

    A ban on providing IT, engineering, and legal services to Russian entities will also take effect.

    The package, which will also include new criteria for sanctions circumvention, builds on already-unprecedented European sanctions against Russia as a result of its invasion of Ukraine in February.

    EU measures to date include restrictions on energy from Russia, bans on financial transactions with Russian entities, including the central bank, and asset freezes against more than 1,000 people and 100 organizations.

  • Ukraine war: Putinn passes laws annexing Ukraine despite military losses

    Even as his troops faced more blows, Russian President Vladimir Putin signed the necessary documents to seize four regions of Ukraine.

    The documents state that the Luhansk, Donetsk, Zaporizhzhia, and Kherson areas have been “admitted into the Russian Federation.”

    But in two of those areas – Luhansk and Kherson – Ukraine said it has been retaking more villages.

    Mr Putin also signed a decree to formalise Russia’s seizure of the nuclear power plant in Zaporizhzhia.

    Last Friday, the Russian leader held a grand ceremony in the Kremlin, where he signed agreements with the Moscow-installed leaders of the four regions.

    The move followed self-proclaimed referendums in the areas, denounced as a “sham” by the West.

    But on the ground there appears to be a different reality, with Ukrainian forces making gains in both the south and the east.

    Serhiy Haidai, Ukrainian governor of Luhansk, told the BBC on Wednesday that six villages in the region had been recaptured.

    And President Zelensky later said Ukraine had liberated three more villages in the southern region of Kherson.

    That followed a series of gains in Kherson the previous day, including the strategically key village of Davydiv Brid.

    Meanwhile, the southern city of Zaporizhzhia was rocked by a series of huge explosions an hour or so before dawn.

    Local authorities say seven Russian missiles hit residential buildings and that people are under the rubble. There has been no information on casualties so far.

    The BBC’s Paul Adams, who is in the city, says rescue workers are combing through the shattered remains of an elegant five storey apartment building in the middle of the city.

    Ukraine says multiple explosions were heard in the southern city of Zaporizhzhia before dawn on Thursday
    Image caption, Zaporizhzhia was rocked by a series of huge explosions an hour or so before dawn on Thursday

    Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said Russia would retake any territory that had been lost to Ukrainian forces.

    Facing questions over the recent losses, he told reporters: “There is no contradiction here. They will be with Russia forever, they will be returned.”

    In a speech to teachers on Russian teachers’ day, Mr Putin said he would “calmly develop” the annexed territories.

    But Andrey Kartopolov, the chairman of the State Duma defence committee, told state media that Russia needed to stop lying about what was happening on the battlefield, saying that Russians were not stupid.

    Russia is still working to mobilise reservists, after Mr Putin announced a call-up last month of 300,000 people who had completed compulsory military service.

    But Mr Putin has rowed back on which groups will be affected, after strong opposition and protests in Russia against the move.

    He has signed a decree exempting several categories of students, including first-time students at accredited institutions, and certain types of postgraduate students – such as those in the field of science.

    In another move, President Putin has signed a decree to formalise Russia’s seizure of the nuclear power plant in one of the annexed regions – Zaporizhzhia – which has been occupied by Russian troops since the early days of the war.

    Russia says the plant – Europe’s largest nuclear facility – will be operated by a new company, but Ukraine’s nuclear operator has dismissed the move as “worthless”.

    Rafael Grossi, the head of the UN’s nuclear watchdog, the IAEA, has said he will hold consultations with the two sides following the development.

    He is heading to Kyiv and then Moscow, seeking to establish a protection zone around the plant, which is situated near the front line of fighting.

    Russia’s President Vladimir Putin has signed the final papers to annex four regions of Ukraine – even as his military suffered further setbacks.

    The Luhansk, Donetsk, Zaporizhzhia and Kherson regions are “accepted into the Russian Federation” the documents say.

  • The annexation of Ukrainian territory by Russia is rejected by Turkey

    Turkey’s foreign ministry has said it rejects Russia’s annexation of four regions in Ukraine, adding the decision is a “grave violation” of international law.

    Turkey, a NATO member, has conducted a diplomatic balancing act since Russia invaded Ukraine on February 24.

    Ankara opposes Western sanctions on Russia and has close ties with both Moscow and Kyiv, its Black Sea neighbours. It has also criticised Russia’s invasion and sent armed drones to Ukraine.

    The Turkish ministry said on Saturday it had not recognised Russia’s annexation of Crimea in 2014, adding that it rejects Russia’s decision to annex the four regions, Donetsk, Luhansk, Kherson, and Zaporizhia.

  • Truss: UK will never accept the 4 Russia’s annexed regions as anything other than Ukrainian

    Donetsk, Luhansk, Kherson, and Zaporizhzhia would never be accepted by the UK, according to Prime Minister Liz Truss.

    In advance of President Vladimir Putin’s anticipated decision to recognise the territories once occupied by Ukraine as Russian following widely condemned referendums, she released a statement on Friday morning.

    She said: “Vladimir Putin has, once again, acted in violation of international law with clear disregard for the lives of the Ukrainian people he claims to represent.

    “The UK will never ignore the sovereign will of those people and we will never accept the regions of Donetsk, Luhansk, Kherson, and Zaporizhzhia as anything other than Ukrainian territory.

    “Putin cannot be allowed to alter international borders using brute force. We will ensure he loses this illegal war.”

  • Russia’s planned annexation of Ukrainian territories follows predictable script

    In a move that follows a plodding and predictable script Russia will recognise the four territories it has occupied and captured in conquest. 

    Under the country’s 1993 constitution there needed to be a popular vote for this to happen – hence the hurried fake referenda.

    Like other autocratic police states, pseudo- legalism is of the utmost importance in Russia – we’ll hear a lot more turgid legal language today as a way of giving this international outrage a veneer of legitimacy.

    Moving to annex Russia has overturned centuries of convention – that you don’t steal land with force.

    Putin is also returning Europe to a period pre-WW2.

    For the Kremlin though there’s logic and need.

    Domestically the annexation allows Putin more room to argue that Russia’s ‘Special Military Operation’ is not an offensive but a defensive manoeuvre.

    There was no invasion.

    Luhansk, Donetsk, Zaporizhia, and Kherson are now, according to Putin, part of the motherland.

    Mobilisation is therefore not only justified but necessary to fight off a wider attack by the west.

    The Kremlin is signalling it is now battling not a limited war but an unlimited existential war.

    That’s the sale to the public.

    What he’s hawking to the west is a bit more nuclear blackmail.

    As part of Russia these four occupied regions will fall under Moscow’s nuclear umbrella – is it worth WW3 by continuing to support Ukraine?

    And in the upside-down world of Putin’s Russia reality doesn’t matter.

    The fact that Russian forces don’t even control all of the areas he’s about to annex – which is about the size of Portugal – can be glossed over.

    The war of liberation continues and even if it means bombing his own new subjects.

    This morning in what appears to be another egregious Russian war crime a convoy of civilians were killed in a missile attack.

    At the time of writing 28 are wounded and 25 dead according to officials in Ukraine.

    The bigger picture of all of this is that this crisis just got a bit worse.

    Putin is signposting that – despite manpower shortages and major setbacks on the battlefield – he’s not giving up.

    Any chance of a negotiated settlement is now non-existent.

    Source: Alex Rossi, Sky News international correspondent