EU
‘quietly’ lifts ban on supplying Kiev with weapons and technology
– Russia
RT,
2
August, 2014
The
European Union has “quietly” agreed to lift restrictions
supplying Kiev with military technology and equipment which can be
used for the “repression” in the country, the Russian Foreign
Ministry said.
"During
a recent meeting of the Council of Europe in Brussels, leaders of EU
member states agreed 'on the quiet' to remove restrictions on exports
to Kiev of equipment that could be used for internal repression,"
the ministry said in a statement on its website. "Exports of
military technologies and equipment were also allowed."
Moscow
slammed the move as "contradicting the rules of military
technologies and ammunition exports which have been earlier applied
by the EU" and also "pierced" by double standards.
‘Situation
atrocious’: Russian Red Cross says E. Ukraine faces humanitarian
catastrophe
The
EU approved its rules for controlling the export of weapons and
ammunition on December 8, 2008. Criterion #3 calls on the EU member
countries to stop issuing export licenses for military equipment and
technologies that can provoke or prolong conflict.
A
woman is seen outside a residential building destroyed in an
artillery attack by the Ukrainian army on Lugansk.(RIA Novosti /
Valeriy Melnikov)A woman is seen outside a residential building
destroyed in an artillery attack by the Ukrainian army on
Lugansk.(RIA Novosti / Valeriy Melnikov)
The
decision to restart issuing licenses for special military equipment
exports came despite the continuing “anti-terrorist operation” in
eastern Ukraine, the ministry said.
“It
is obvious why the EU is ignoring indisputable facts of shelling of
Russian territory [in the southwest Russian region of Rostov] from
the Ukrainian side: the perspective of feeling your own involvement
in such actions creates certain discomfort in Brussels,” the
statement said.
The
ministry called upon its European counterparts “to follow logic,”
not the "prodding" from Washington.
“The
decision to limit the supply of ammunition and weaponry to Ukraine
should have been introduced after the launch of the so-called
‘anti-terrorist operation’ in the Donbas and Lugansk Regions. It
is not too late to restore the ban,” the ministry said.
Donbas,
a historical, economic and cultural part of eastern Ukraine, includes
the northern part of the Donetsk Region and the south of the Lugansk
region.
The
restrictions were introduced by the EU Council in February when
Viktor Yanukovich was the country’s president and there was a
severe confrontation between Maidan protesters and police.
“Then
the EU decided that it was ‘wrong’ to supply ‘Yanukovich
regime’ with weapons,” Moscow pointed out.
The
restrictions were first introduced by the European Council in
February 2014 when Viktor Yanukovich was the country’s president
and there were violent clashes between Maidan protesters and police.
“Then the EU decided that it was ‘wrong’ to supply ‘Yanukovich
regime’ with weapons,” the ministry said.
Kiev’s so-called “anti-terrorist operation” in the eastern regions of Ukraine has intensified lately. The most recent crackdown was in the village of Gorlovka, in the Donetsk Region. It resulted in 31 civilians being killed there.
According to UN figures, at least 1,129 people have been killed and nearly 3,500 wounded in eastern Ukraine since the start of the operation in April. Also, 100,000 people have been forcibly displaced.
The UN report said that the cause of the rising death toll is intensified artillery shelling of civilian residential areas and so-called “collateral damage” in heavily-populated areas
Group
of int’l experts leaves MH17 crash site in Donetsk region due to
shelling
About
80 international specialists have arrived at the crash site,
including eight members of the OSCE Special Monitoring Mission, and
experts from the Netherlands and Australia
2
August, 2014
VIENNA,
August 02, /ITAR-TASS/. A group of international experts working at
the MH17 crash site in the east Ukrainian Donetsk region left the
area due to shelling on Saturday.
OSCE
spokesperson Shiv Sharma said the situation had become dangerous for
the experts and they had left the area.
He
said, however, that only one group had left while all the others
continued working at the scene. Sharma said that search had not been
stopped but the situation was volatile and changing rapidly.
About
80 international specialists have arrived at the crash site,
including eight members of the OSCE Special Monitoring Mission, and
experts from the Netherlands and Australia.
On
July 31, at their meeting in Minsk, officials from Ukraine, the OSCE
and Russia, and representatives of the self-proclaimed Donetsk
People’s Republic agreed to cease fire within the humanitarian
corridor used by OSCE monitors to access the crash site.
No
incidents have been reported since Thursday when experts returned to
the scene after a week-long break.
In
the first several days after the accident, members of the local
militias found fragments of more than 200 bodies at the crash site.
All of them were taken to the Netherlands for identification.
Australian
and Dutch experts are looking for the remains of the passengers and
their personal belongings to be shipped to the Netherlands. This may
take several weeks.
The
expert mission consists of 332 members who are to be joined shortly
by 68 Malaysian policemen. Up to 100 people will be working at the
crash site daily but they will not be conducting the investigation or
collecting evidence.
The
plane en route from Amsterdam to Kuala Lumpur crashed in Ukraine’s
eastern Donetsk region 60 km from the Russian border on July 17 and
as many as 298 people aboard died.
This
is a very old conflict, between Azerbaidjan and Armenia, that goes back to the twilight days of the
Soviet Union.
I have little knowledge of this but have little problem imagining the role of the US in undermining stability.
I have little knowledge of this but have little problem imagining the role of the US in undermining stability.
Moscow
concerned about deteriorating situation in Karabakh region
2
August, 2014
MOSCOW,
August 02 /ITAR-TASS/. Moscow on Saturday voiced concern about the
latest flare-ups in the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict area and urged the
parties involved to refrain from using force and take steps towards
stabilising the situation in the region.
“We
express serious concern about the dramatic deterioration of the
situation in the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict area, which has resulted
in considerable casualties,” Foreign Ministry Deputy Spokesperson
Maria Zakharova said.
“We
regard the latest events as a serious violation of the ceasefire and
the declared intentions to achieve a political settlement,” she
said, adding that further escalation would be unacceptable.
Four
Azerbaijani army servicemen were killed in overnight clashes, the
Azerbaijani Defence Ministry said, adding that Armenians had also
sustained casualties but did not elaborate.
Defence
Ministry spokesperson Vagif Dargyakhly denied media reports alleging
that the Azerbaijani army was using guided missile systems against
Armenian troops.
“Units
of the country’s Armed Forces are taking adequate measures in
response to ceasefire violations by the Armenian side. But they are
using only large caliber firearms,” he said.
He
confirmed that 12 Azerbaijani troops had been killed in the conflict
area over the past four days and several had been wounded, but did
not specify.
The
spokesperson said the current situation in the region was relatively
calm.
Azerbaijani
President Ilham Aliyev said in July that his country was using
political and economic factors to resolve the Nagorno-Karabakh
conflict peacefully.
He
stressed that Azerbaijan could solve the problem by force, but “we
think the potential of negotiations has not been used up yet”.
“Using
political, economic and military pressure we will try to get the
issue solved peacefully. Our economic, political and military
potential is quite strong and this factor will play a positive role
at the talks,” the president said, adding that the conflict could
not remain frozen.
Aliyev
regretted the absence of progress in the resolution of the conflict
despite the international mediators’ efforts. “We are of the
opinion that the mediators dealing with this [Karabakh] issue are
more interested in keeping the situation in its present state. Their
main interest is in preserving stability and preventing a war in the
region. We also want peace. But at the same time we want to see truth
and justice restored and international law triumphing,” he said.
The
president also believes that the conflict should be settled
“cardinally”. “Half-solutions can only be an interim step. We
should not forget the main goal. The people of Azerbaijan should
return to the occupied territories,” he said.
He
stressed that Nagorno-Karabakh’s Armenians could get a high status
of autonomy within Azerbaijan. “We proposed this and this approach
is based on the most positive experience the world and Europe have,”
he added.
The
Armenian president’s spokesperson Arman Sagatelyan said on Saturday
that the conflict could not be resolved by force.
“Armenia
is convinced that there can be no military solution to the Karabakh
conflict,” he said. “The truce agreement signed in 1994 clearly
states the parties’ legal obligations that must be respected. The
Nagorno-Karabakh problem can only be resolved through peace
negotiation,” Sagatelyan said.
The
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict began on February 22, 1988. On November 29,
1989 direct rule in Nagorno-Karabakh was ended and Azerbaijan
regained control of the region. However later a joint session of the
Armenian parliament and the top legislative body of Nagorno-Karabakh
proclaimed the unification of Nagorno-Karabakh with Armenia.
On
December 10, 1991, Armenians in Nagorno-Karabakh held a referendum,
boycotted by local Azeris, which approved the creation of an
independent state.
The
struggle over Nagorno-Karabakh escalated after both Armenia and
Azerbaijan obtained independence from the Soviet Union in 1991. By
the end of 1993, the conflict had caused thousands of casualties and
created hundreds of thousands of refugees on both sides. An
unofficial ceasefire was reached on May 12, 1994.
As
of August, 2008, the co-chairmen of the OSCE Minsk Group were
attempting to negotiate a full settlement of the conflict. On August
2, 2008, Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev and Armenian President
Serzh Sargsyan travelled to Moscow for talks with Dmitry Medvedev,
who was Russian president at the time.
As a result, the three presidents signed an agreement that calls for talks on a political settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.
As a result, the three presidents signed an agreement that calls for talks on a political settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.
Saakashvili
is the puppet of the US who during the Beijing Olympics invaded South
Ossetia. Moscow's intervention was turned by America into a “Russian
invasion of Georgia”
Saakashvili
was voted out of office and is facing charges of abuse of power in
his country
Georgia: Saakashvili
not to seek political asylum in foreign countries
On
July 28, the Prosecutor General’s Office brought criminal charges
against Saakashvili for power abuse
3
November, 2014
TBILISI,
August 03 /ITAR-TASS/. Georgia’s former president, Mikhail
Saakashvili, will not seek asylum in any country because there is no
need for him to do that. In an interview with the Tbilisi-based
Rustavi-2 television company, Saakashvili described the power abuse
accusations against him as groundless. He hopes the Saturday ruling
of the Tbiliisi city court on preliminary confinement, passed in
absentia, will not restrict his ability of global travel.
“I
have recently been to Albania. On July 30, I was in Budapest at the
invitation of my friend Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban. I am
planning to visit some other countries soon,” Saakashvili who is
currently staying in New York said. He added that Georgia and Russia
were the only two countries which he could not visit for the moment.
“Saakashvili
has been refusing to appear in court as a witness on many
high-profile cases in recent months. Later, he even refused to be
questioned on Skype. Under Georgian laws, prosecutors had the right
to demand a measure of restriction for Saakashvili what the court
did,” a spokesperson for the Georgian Prosecutor General’s Office
said.
On
July 28, the Prosecutor General’s Office brought criminal charges
against Saakashvili for power abuse. It said that on November 7, 2007
Mikhail Saakashvili, who was the president of Georgia at that time,
issued a criminal order to policemen to crack down on demonstrators
in capital Tbilisi. As a result, hundreds of peaceful civilians were
beaten up. Georgian riot police burst into the territory of the Imedi
television company, beating its staff and ordinary people.
After
that, Georgia’s top officials, who followed Saakashvili’s orders,
started seizing property from Georgian businessman Badri
Patarkatsishvili.
Mikhail
Saakashvili was the president of Georgia from January 2004 to
November 17, 2013. Saakashvili left Georgia in mid-November 2013, two
days before his presidential term officially expired. He has been
living abroad since then.
See
the US version of things HERE
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