The Phnom Penh Post

Moscow scraps Spain fuel stop for Syria-bound ships

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RUSSIA scrapped plans on Wednesday to refuel Syria-bound warships in a Spanish port after Madrid came under pressure to refuse access to a flotilla that may be used to help attacks on Aleppo.

Spain’s Foreign Ministry said three Russian ships had been due to take on fuel and supplies at the port of Ceuta, a Spanish territory on the north coast of Africa across the sea from Gibraltar.

These were believed to be part of a wider fleet led by aircraft carrier Admiral Kuznetsov.

There has been concern the ships could take part in airstrikes in Syria, where Russia has been conducting a bombing campaign in support of President Bashar al-Assad and has deployed a naval contingent to back up its operation.

“The Russian Embassy in Madrid . . . told us that it is withdrawin­g its demand for permission to stop over for the boats, which means that the stop-overs have been cancelled,” the Spanish Foreign Ministry said in a statement.

Moscow’s decision comes against a backdrop of increasing tensions between Russia and the West over the war in Syria, as well as the conflict in Ukraine. Just last week, the European Union’s 28 leaders – including Spanish acting Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy – signed a draft statement con- AdmiralKuz­netsov. demning “the attacks by the Syrian regime and its allies, notably Russia, on civilians in Aleppo”.

Russian ships have for years made stops in Spanish ports, with permission granted on a case-bycase basis, taking into account the safety of local residents and the environmen­t, Spain’s Foreign Ministry said.

“[But] faced with informatio­n that materialis­ed about the possibilit­y that these ships would help support military actions in the Syrian city of Aleppo, the Foreign Ministry asked the Russian Embassy in Madrid for clarificat­ion on this informatio­n,” it said.

Following this, Russia cancelled the planned stop-over, it added.

News of the stop-over prompted criticism ON Tuesday.

The Foreign Ministry said Spain had in September given Russia permission to refuel from October 28 to November 2.

But Mike Walliker, the commander of British forces in Gibraltar, said Wednesday evening that the fleet had already sailed through the Strait of Gibraltar into the Mediterran­ean.

The first group, comprised of escort vessels, entered at around 4am local time (0200 GMT), he said. The second – which included the aircraft carrier – sailed through several hours later, passing Gibraltar just before sunrise, he added.

NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenber­g had expressed concern that the fleet could take part in Syria air strikes.

“It’s a decision which has been taken by individual allies, whether they provide fuelling and supplies to Russian ships,” he said. “But this time I have conveyed a very clear message that we are concerned about the potential of this carrier group to increase attacks in Aleppo.”

At least 57 Russian navy ships stopped in Ceuta between 2011 – when Moscow started to regularly use the port facilities there – and August 2015, according to conservati­ve US think tank Heritage Foundation.

 ?? STRINGER/FORSVARET/AFP ?? The Russian aircraft carrier
STRINGER/FORSVARET/AFP The Russian aircraft carrier

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