AP
Ukrainian armoured personnel carriers ride along a country road outside the town of Svyitohirsk near Sloviansk on Saturday.
To target individuals rather than sections of Russian economy
The United States and its allies have agreed to ramp up
pressure on Russia over Ukraine as Kiev’s military crackdown on
pro-Russian protesters in the east has stalled.
In a
joint statement the Group of Seven nations said they would “move
swiftly” on new sanctions against Russia, which “has taken no concrete
actions” to implement the Geneva agreement on defusing the Ukraine
crisis.
The statement was released by the White House
on Friday when it became clear that Kiev’s “anti-terrorist operation”
in Ukraine’s southeast had bogged down.
Ukrainian
authorities had called off an assault on the insurgents-held city of
Sloviansk after Russia launched large-scale war games near the Ukrainian
border, vowing to “stop the Ukrainian war machine” from attacking
civilians.
U.S. President Barack Obama had a
conference call with European leaders on Friday in an effort to marshal
their support for broader sanctions against Russia, but their joint
statement said the new sanctions would be “targeted,” that is, targeting
individuals, rather than sections of the Russian economy.
Moreover,
the sanctions will not necessarily be identical. A senior U.S. official
said each G7 country will determine itself which targeted sanctions
they will impose. The official said U.S. sanctions could come as early
as Monday.
The G7 statement came as the Pentagon said
Russian fighter jets ventured into Ukrainian airspace several times
over the last 24 hours.
Ukraine’s Acting Prime
Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk, who was in Rome on Saturday, said Russian
aircraft crossed the border “seven times” overnight.
However,
Ukraine’s Acting Defence Minister was quoted by Ukrainian media as
stating that there had been “no violations of Ukrainian land borders or
airspace.”
Russia has also denied its aircraft had violated the Ukrainian airspace.
Ukraine’s
Security Service said on Saturday that the military had set up four
roadblocks near Sloviansk in order to prevent protesters from receiving
reinforcements.
However, the measures failed to stop
leaders of the self-proclaimed “Donetsk Republic” from travelling to the
besieged city from Donetsk 130 km away on Saturday.
Addressing
a press conference at the local government headquarters in Sloviansk
leaders of the “Donetsk Republic” said they had drawn up plans to
coordinate resistance tactics and that self-defence forces in Donetsk
would shortly send reinforcements to Sloviansk.
Self-proclaimed
Mayor of Slovyansk Vyacheslav Ponomaryov confirmed that his people had
detained a group of international observers in Sloviansk on suspicion
that they were gathering intelligence on protesters’ positions.
Mr.
Ponomaryov said the group, which is in Ukraine on a military
verification mission under the 2011 Vienna Document, had not notified
him about their visit to Sloviansk. He said the protesters planned to
exchange the observers for activists detained by Ukrainian security
services.
AFP reports from Siauliai: U.S. troops
arrived on Saturday in Lithuania, part of a U.S. contingent of 600 sent
to the region to reassure NATO allies. Lithuanian President Dalia
Grybauskaite hailed the arrival of American forces as a “deterrence
measure.”
No comments:
Post a Comment