The western reports leave out that there was a second victim (from the Self Defence Force). This sounds like a provocation to me.
2
killed in shooting near Crimea military research center, 'sniper
detained'
Two people -- a self-defense member and a Ukrainian soldier -- were killed and two others wounded after snipers opened fire from a partially inhabited building near a military research center in Simferopol. One sniper was detained, another is on the run.
READ MORE: http://on.rt.com/dnb7xs
Putin
confirms Crimea annexation as Ukraine soldier becomes first casualty
Russian president denounces hypocrisy of west but Ukraine's PM accuses Moscow of war crime after soldier is shot dead
19
March, 2014
Vladimir
Putin announced the annexation of Crimea on Tuesday, denouncing
western hypocrisy in a searing speech to political elites in Moscow
that is likely to go down as one of the defining moments of his long
rule over Russia.
In
an hour-long speech in the Kremlin, shot through with angry rhetoric,
the Russian president said western politicians "call something
white today and black tomorrow" and aired a long list of foreign
policy grievances going back to 2000, saying "we were cheated
again and again, with decisions being taken behind our back".
Putin
ridiculed the idea that events in Crimea amounted to Russian
aggression and said there had been no shots fired and no casualties
during recent weeks. Yet hours after he spoke, a Ukrainian soldier
was shot dead at an army base in the Crimean capital, Simferopol, the
first military fatality on the peninsula since the crisis began.
Ukrainian
military sources said that one junior officer had been killed and
another injured by a sniper, after an assault on the base by "unknown
forces, fully equipped and their faces covered".
Arseniy
Yatsenyuk, Ukraine's prime minister, accused Moscow of committing a
war crime and said the conflict with Russia was "moving from a
political to a military one". After the incident Kiev issued a
statement authorising its armed forces to use weapons to defend
themselves.
The
announcement came a day after the US and EU announced sanctions
against several top Russian officials. Herman Van Rompuy, president
of the European council, and José Manuel Barroso, head of the
European commission, dismissed Putin's case for annexation and
pledged a "unified European response" at the EU summit in
Brussels on Thursday, following the EU's decision to impose travel
bans and asset freezes on 21 Russian and Crimean figures. Van Rompuy
is due to meet Putin in Moscow on Wednesday.
In
Britain the foreign secretary, William Hague, announced the
suspension of joint naval exercises with Russia and of export
licences for military items to Moscow, saying Putin had chosen the
"route of isolation".
The
US vice-president, Joe Biden, speaking a visit to Poland and the
Baltic states aimed at assuring Russia's EU neighbours about US and
Nato security guarantees, declared that Putin and Russia now stood
alone and "naked before the world" guilty of international
aggression.
"Russia
has offered a variety of arguments to justify what is nothing more
than a land-grab," he said. Biden revealed that the US was
considering deploying ground troops to the Baltic states on new
military exercises as it seeks to reassure Nato allies in eastern
Europe of its commitment to preventing further territorial aggression
by Russia.
The
White House spokesman, Jay Carney, on Tuesday foreshadowed a fresh
round of sanctions. "More is coming," he said amid
criticism that existing measures are too weak.
Carney
suggested powerful and wealthy oligarchs with ties to Putin would be
targeted. "I think anyone who understands how the Russian system
of governance works and who has influence in that system understands
the kind of person that we're talking about here, and the fact that
they have substantial assets, not just in Russia but abroad," he
said.
In
Moscow, Putin was defiant in the face of western criticism. The
Russian president summoned the federal assembly, which includes both
houses of parliament and all key political leaders, for an
extraordinary session in the Kremlin's St George Hall.
Putin
referenced the recognition of Kosovo by the west as an independent
country following its secession from Serbia, and said it was
ludicrous to claim that the move did not set a precedent.
"How
would our colleagues claim its uniqueness? It turns out because
during the Kosovo conflict there were many human casualties. What, is
that supposed to be a valid legal argument?" he asked.
"We
are being told that we are breaking the norms of international law.
Well at least it's good that they've remembered that international
law exists. Better late than never."
"In
the hearts and minds of people, Crimea has always been and remains an
inseparable part of Russia," the president said, adding that
ethnic Russians had found themselves isolated from the motherland
when the Soviet Union collapsed, both in Crimea and elsewhere.
"Millions
of Russians went to sleep in one country and woke up living abroad,
as a national minority in former republics of the union. The Russian
people became one of the biggest, if not the biggest, split-up nation
in the world."
He
was frequently interrupted by applause and at the end of the speech
signed documents together with the de facto leader of Crimea, Sergei
Aksyonov – who came to power after seizing the local parliament at
gunpoint last month – to absorb the territory into Russia.
Putin
recognised Crimea as an independent state on Monday night, making it
easier to incorporate into the Russian Federation than if it were
still Ukrainian territory. Kiev has said it will never give up its
claim to Crimea, but is unable to respond to Russia militarily due to
the huge disparity in their respective forces.
Ukrainian
politician Vitali Klitschko, who will stand in presidential elections
in May, called for Ukraine to sever diplomatic ties with Russia.
With
the annexation of Crimea considered a fait accompli, Kiev and the
west are now looking with anxiety to eastern Ukraine, where a number
of protests by elements of the Russian-speaking population have ended
in violence and led the Russian foreign ministry to speak about the
possible necessity of "defending" Russian speakers there.
"Don't
believe those who try to frighten you with Russia and who scream that
other regions will follow after Crimea," said Putin, going some
way to allaying those fears. "We do not want a partition of
Ukraine. We do not need this."
However,
he reiterated his belief that Moscow feels the Kiev government is
illegitimate, and also referenced long-held Russian fears of
encirclement by the west.
"I
do not want to be welcomed in Sevastopol by Nato sailors," said
Putin, speaking of the Crimean port where Russia's Black Sea fleet is
based.
The
city has special status within Crimea and Russia will officially
welcome two new nations into its fold: Crimea, and the city of
Sevastopol. Thousands gathered in the city to watch Putin's speech on
a big screen in the main square and broke into the Russian national
anthem when it was over. In Simferopol men on ladders removed the
large gold Ukrainian-language lettering on the regional parliament.
It
is expected that in the coming months Crimea will switch to the
rouble and introduce Moscow time and the Russian visa system. Russia
will begin ratification of the treaty to formalise Crimea's
annexation within days.
Crimean
authorities have said that all Ukrainian military installations on
the peninsula, including several bases, are now illegal and the
soldiers must leave. Many have done so, but some remain.
Ukrainian
and Russian troops had agreed a ceasefire until Friday, and the
circumstances of the shoot-out on Tuesday remain murky.
However,
the death of a Ukrainian soldier was a reminder that there is
potential for Russia's annexation to turn bloody. Russian soldiers
have been active in Crimea in recent weeks, despite Kremlin claims to
the contrary, and often act in consort with local informal militias.
There were reports that a local militia member had also been shot
dead in the clash and another injured.
The
west was struggling to respond to Moscow's moves, with initial
sanctions clearly having no real effect except to galvanise Moscow in
its feeling of victimisation. Barack Obama is to spend most of next
week in Europe for a couple of international summits that will now
turn into emergency meetings about Russia and Ukraine.
The
White House called for an emergency meeting of the G7 countries on
Ukraine to be held on the fringes of a summit in The Hague devoted to
nuclear security. Russia is also invited to the summit, raising the
possibility of a first face-to-face confrontation between Putin and
western leaders in the crisis.
The
Polish prime minister, Donald Tusk, warned of major and long-lasting
consequences from Putin's actions, which had changed the "borders
of states overnight".
"It
changes the geopolitical situation in this part of the world,"
he said. "Before our eyes, the history of this region is
changing."
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