18 March 2014

The Crimea for the day


The BBC has an article about the latest about the Crimea:
President Vladimir Putin (photo) has told Russia's parliament that the Crimea has "always been part of Russia". Putin was speaking at the Kremlin, where he announced new laws for the Crimea to join the Russian Federation and asked MPs to back the move. Putin and the Crimea's leaders then signed an agreement formalizing the region's absorption into Russia.
The Crimea declared independence from the Ukraine after a widely condemned referendum. Crimean officials say 97% of voters backed splitting from the Ukraine, but the EU and US have declared the vote illegal and imposed sanctions. The government in Kiev described the vote as a "circus" held at gunpoint.
The Crimea was taken over by pro-Russian forces in late February 2014 after the Ukraine's President Viktor Yanukovych fled to Russia following months of street protests.
The EU and US have declared the vote illegal and imposed sanctions in response.
Travel bans and asset freezes have been imposed on government officials and other figures in Russia, the Crimea, and the Ukraine, but these have been largely dismissed as ineffectual in Russia.
Putin earlier recognized the Crimea as a sovereign state and approved a draft bill on the accession.Then, in a televised address in front of both houses of parliament and in the presence of the Crimea's new leaders, he said: "In the hearts and minds of people, the Crimea has always been and remains an inseparable part of Russia." The referendum had been legal and its results were "more than convincing", he said. "The people of the Crimea clearly and convincingly expressed their will; they want to be with Russia," he said, and were no longer prepared to put up with the "historical injustice" of being part of the Ukraine. He criticized the Ukraine's post-uprising leaders and those behind the unrest, saying they were "extremists" who had brought chaos. He praised the "courage, bearing and dignity" of Crimeans, and thanked all Russians for their "patriotic feeling".
The West, he said, had behaved "irresponsibly" in backing the uprising, and dismissed concerns that Russia might go on to annex more of the Ukraine. "Don't trust those who frighten you with Russia... we do not need a divided Ukraine" he said. Russia "will, of course, be facing foreign confrontation" he said. "But we have to decide for ourselves, are we to protect our national interests, or just carry on giving them away forever?"
He also thanked China for its support during the crisis. Beijing, which routinely avoids commenting on the affairs of other countries, had abstained from voting on a UN draft resolution condemning Russia for its actions in the Crimea.
The audience frequently applauded Putin at length during his speech and gave him a standing ovation, with chants of Russia, Russia.
Putin and Crimean Prime Minister Sergei Aksyonov then signed the bill to make the Black Sea peninsula a part of Russia. The bill must now be approved by the constitutional court and then ratified by parliament.
The BBC's Richard Galpin in Moscow says the process is likely to be completed by the end of the week.
The Ukrainian crisis began in November of 2013, after President Viktor Yanukovych ditched an EU deal in favor of stronger ties with Russia.
Rico says the fat lady hasn't sung yet...

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