Russia
sets 4 conditions in return for aid to Ukraine
RT,
12
April, 2014
Ukraine
should recognize Crimea’s independence, reform the country’s
constitution, regulate the crisis in its eastern regions and
guarantee the rights of Russian speakers if it wants to get financial
help from Moscow, Russia’s finance minister has said.
“If
Ukraine fulfils these four conditions, then Russia will be able to
propose further steps on additional help both on financial and gas
issues,” Finance Minister
Anton Siluanov said after meeting with his German counterpart,
Wolfgang Schauble, in Washington.
Deescalating
tensions in eastern Ukraine should be peaceful, based on Ukraine’s
legislation, “without discrimination against
Russian-speaking population, without victims and bloodshed,”
Siluanov said.
It
is necessary for Ukraine to conduct constitutional reform, hold
legitimate presidential elections and “form a government
with which one may negotiate,”
he said.
Finance
Minister Anton Siluanov (RIA Novosti / Vladimir Fedorenko)
Ukraine’s
gas debt is now estimated at over $2.2 billion. On Thursday,
President Vladimir Putin wrote
letters to the leaders of 18 European countries, including Germany
and France, warning that Ukraine’s debt crisis had reached a
“critical”
level and could threaten transit to Europe. He also called for urgent
cooperation, urging Russia’s partners in the West to take action.
According
to German Chancellor Angela Merkel
"there
are many reasons to seriously take into account this message […]
and for Europe to deliver a joint European response.”
In
total, Moscow has subsidized Ukraine’s economy to the tune of $35.4
billion, coupled with a $3 billion loan tranche in December. Due to
Ukraine’s gas debts, Gazprom revoked all discounts and is now
charging $485 per 1,000 cubic meters of gas, a price Ukraine says it
will not be able to pay.
Pro-Russian
activists rally at a barricade outside the regional state
administration in the eastern Ukrainian city of Donetsk on April 11,
2014. (AFP Photo / Anatolii Stepanov)
The
deteriorating economic situation is coupled with escalating tensions
in Ukraine. The country’s Interior Ministry promised a harsh
response to the riots in the east, especially in the “separatist
regions” of Donetsk, Lugansk and Kharkov. The coup-appointed
authorities said they would arrest all violators, "regardless
of the declared slogans and party affiliation."
Eastern
and southern Ukraine have been showing discontent with the new
government in Kiev for weeks. Tensions escalated Monday when
protesters in several cities started seizing local administration
buildings. Major protests took place in the cities of Donetsk,
Kharkov and Lugansk, while smaller actions and some clashes were
reported in Odessa and Nikolayev.
After
Donetsk activists proclaimed the region independent and demanded a
referendum on its future status, Ukraine’s coup-imposed president
Aleksandr Turchinov ordered the sending in of armed personnel and
armored vehicles to the east.
At
least 70 activists have been arrested in the course of the crackdown
launched by Ukraine’s Interior Ministry in the eastern city of
Kharkov. Most of them remain in prison, with 62 people detained for
at least two months.
Sanctions
are ‘counterproductive’ for all
At
the G20 finance ministers’ meeting in Washington, sanctions against
Russia’s alleged interference into Ukraine’s affairs dominated
the background. While speaking with journalists, Siluanov said that
he was against US and EU sanctions against Russian and that the
widening of such sanctions would be “counterproductive”
for all sides.
In
the latest series of sanctions, leading Crimean officials were
targeted; those, according to the US Treasury, who were responsible
for organizing the March 16 referendum, which led to the peninsula
leaving Ukraine and joining Russia.
Among
the seven officials forbidden from entering the US or engaging in
economic activity with America-based companies are acting Sevastopol
governor Aleksey Chaliy, the head of the Crimean security service
Pyotr Zima, and Mikhail Malyshev, the head of the electoral
commission that oversaw the poll.
Additionally,
US-based assets of Chernomorneftegaz, the former subsidiary of the
Ukrainian state gas company located on the Crimean peninsula, will be
frozen.
The
US, the EU and several international groups have imposed sanctions on
senior Russian officials. The US also introduced measures including a
ban on exporting defense items and services to Russia to pressure
Moscow over recent events in Ukraine.
Supporters
of the detained pro-Russian protesters shout slogans as they gather
in front of the court building in Kharkiv, April 10, 2014. (Reuters /
Gleb Garanich)
The
G7 group has voiced its readiness to introduce additional sanctions
against Russia, if Moscow continues to “escalate”
the turmoil in neighboring Ukraine, US Treasury Secretary Jack Lew
said.
Meanwhile,
the Russian Foreign Ministry and parliament have repeatedly denounced
the policy of sanctions as inappropriate and counter-productive.
Some
Russian MPs have suggested the possibility of retaliatory sanctions
against US businesses, but these ideas have not been implemented as
they might harm all the countries.
“Sanctions
hurt all countries. We do not intend to introduce reciprocal
sanctions,” Deputy Prime
Minister Igor Shuvalov told reporters during the International
Eastern Forum in Berlin.
Meanwhile,
the meeting between Russia, Ukraine, EU and the US to discuss the
ongoing political crisis in Ukraine will take place on April 17 in
Geneva, the office of EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton said.
Proposals for Ukraine’s constitutional reforms will also be
presented in Geneva. However, Russian FM Sergey Lavrov on Tuesday
expressed concern that Ukraine’s southeastern regions were not
being invited to take part directly in the discussions on a new
constitution for the country.
Siluanov
said that similar concerns were voiced on Friday during a meeting
with Treasury Secretary Lew.
He
added that “Russia is ready to participate in supporting
Ukraine together with the IMF and the European Union.”
He also told Lew that Russia was concerned about Ukraine’s unpaid
debt for supplies of natural gas.
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