Upping
the ante
Crimea's
Sevastopol votes to join Russia
The
Crimean port city of Sevastopol has voted to join Russia effective
immediately and break all relations with Ukraine.
6
March 2014
According
to AFP, the city’s council said in a statement early on Friday that
it had taken a decision "to affiliate itself with the Russian
Federation as a subject of the Russian Federation."
Sevastopol,
which houses Russia's Black Sea Fleet, is the second largest port in
Ukraine after the Port of Odessa.
The
Sevastopol council’s declaration came hours after Crimean
parliament voted to become part of Russia and announced it would hold
a referendum in 10 days to allow voters to decide on the measure.
The
autonomous region’s First Deputy Prime Minister Rustam Temirgaliev
said on Thursday: “The referendum will take place March 16."
The
new Ukrainian government, however, has declared the planned vote
illegal, and opened a criminal investigation against Crimean Prime
Minister Sergei Askyonov. Interim Prime Minister Arseny Yatseniuk
said: "This is an illegitimate decision and this so-called
referendum has no legal grounds at all.
That's
the reason why we urge the Russian government not to support those
who support separatism in the Ukraine."
Turkey
grants US warship permission to enter Black Sea
Turkey has given a US Navy Warship the green light to pass through the Bosphorus within the next two days as tensions in Ukraine’s Crimea region continue to divide world powers.
RT,
6
March 2014
Turkish
sources, speaking with the Hurriyet Daily News on Wednesday, declined
to elaborate on the name of the US warship. The same officials told
the daily on condition of anonymity that the ship in question was not
the USS George H.W. Bush nuclear aircraft carrier as suggested in
some news reports, as it did not meet the standards specified by the
1936 Montreux Convention in terms of weight.
The
US vessel to pass through the straits will meet the convention’s
standards, the sources said.
On
Wednesday, the Russian Black Sea Fleet Staff confirmed to the
Itar-Tass news agency that a US destroyer was expected to enter the
Black Sea later this week.
On
Sunday, Tass reported that the guided-missile frigate USS Taylor, one
of two Navy ships assigned to the Black Sea during the Sochi Winter
Olympics was still in the Turkish Black Sea port of Samsun. The
frigate was deployed on February 5 along with the amphibious command
ship, USS Mount Whitney. According to the Montreux Convention,
warships of countries which do not border the Black Sea cannot remain
in the waters for longer than 21 days. While the USS Mount Whitney
left on February 25, the USS Taylor remained at the Turkish port,
ostensibly for repairs after running aground on February 12.
Meanwhile,
it was reported on Tuesday that two Russian warships entered the
Black Sea through the Bosphorus. The 150 'Saratov' landing ship and
the 156 'Yamal' assault ship crossed the strait around 05:30 GMT, en
route to the Black Sea, the Anadolu Agency (AA) reported.
No
coastguard boats were seen escorting the ships. The Ukrainian Hetman
Sahaydachny followed shortly thereafter, crossing the Dardanelles
Strait off Turkey's west coast. Two coastguard vessels were reported
by AA to be escorting the ship.
The
vessel, which had participated in NATO-led Ocean Shield and Atalanta
counter-piracy operations, reportedly docked near Odessa port on
Wednesday, says the Ministry of Defense of Ukraine.
The
traffic through the Turkish straits comes as tensions between the
West and Russia over recent events in Crimea,
a Ukrainian peninsula located on the northern coast of the Black Sea,
continue to simmer.
Russia
currently leases a military wharf and shore installtions in the
Crimean port of Sevastopol. The Ukrainian government agreed to extend
Russia’s lease on the territory in 2010, allowing the Russian Black
Sea Fleet to effectively stay in Crimea until 2047.
Five
Russian naval units are currently stationed in the port city of
Sevastopol, including the 30th Surface Ship Division, the 41st
Missile Boat Brigade, the 247th Separate Submarine Division, the 68th
Harbor Defense Ship, and the 422nd Separate Hydrographic Ship
Division.
On
Wednesday, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said
that the military personnel of the Black Sea Fleet are “in
their deployment sites" and “additional
vigilance measures were taken to safeguard the sites.”
“We
will do everything to prevent bloodshed," he
said, speaking ahead of his first face-to-face meeting with his US
counterpart, John Kerry, since the crisis erupted.
Over
a week after the government of Viktor Yanukovich was toppled by
violent street protests, fears of deepening political and social
strife have been particularly acute in Ukraine’s pro-Russian east
and south.
One
day after voting to oust Yanukovich, a newly reconfigured parliament
did away with a 2012 law on minority
languages,
which permitted the use of two official languages in regions where
the size of an ethnic minority exceeds 10 percent.
Apart
from the Russian-majority regions affected by this law, Hungarian,
Moldovan and Romanian also lost their status as official languages in
several towns in Western Ukraine.
Authorities
in the Ukrainian Autonomous Republic of Crimea –
where over half the population is ethnically Russian – requested
Moscow’s assistance following the legal downgrade of the Russian
language.
Western
states have accused Russia of militarily intervening in Crimea and
called on Russian troops to return to their Black Sea bases. The
Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) recently
dispatched
military observers to
Kiev. The observers from the pan-European security body are en route
to Crimea, where they will monitor the situation on the ground.
On
Wednesday, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov reiterated
President Putin’s previous words that Russian troops had not
actually been deployed from their bases in Crimea. Lavrov said that
forces with unmarked uniforms which had taken de-facto control over
Crimea are self-defense units that are not under Russia’s auspices.
"If
they are the self-defense forces created by the inhabitants of
Crimea, we have no authority over them," Lavrov
told a news conference in Madrid after a meeting with Spanish Foreign
Minister Jose Manuel Garcia-Margallo.
"They
do not receive orders [from us]," he
said.
On
Saturday, the Russian Federation Council – the upper house of the
Federal Assembly of Russia – approved President Vladimir Putin’s
request to send the country’s military forces to Ukraine to ensure
peace and order in the region “until
the socio-political situation in the country is stabilized.”
According
to the bilateral agreement concerning Russia's Black Sea Fleet
military bases in Crimea, Moscow is allowed to have up
to 25,000 troops
in Ukraine.
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