The Jerusalem Post

Putin, Merkel struggle to move past difference­s

Ties fraught since Russia annexed Crimea with difference­s over Ukraine, Syria, human rights

- • By ANDREAS RINKE and DENIS PINCHUK

SOCHI, Russia (Reuters) – German Chancellor Angela Merkel, on a rare visit to Russia, said that Berlin and Moscow had to keep talking despite their disagreeme­nts, but those same difference­s overshadow­ed her talks with Russian President Vladimir Putin on Tuesday.

At a news conference following a meeting in the Russian Black Sea resort of Sochi, diverging positions were aired over Syria, Ukraine, Russian respect for civil rights, and allegation­s Moscow is interferin­g in other countries’ elections.

Their body language suggested tensions: their facial expression­s as they spoke to reporters were stern, and the two leaders barely looked at each other.

“I am always of the view that even if there are serious difference­s of opinion in some areas, talks must continue,” Merkel said. “You must carry on, because otherwise you fall into silence and there is less and less understand­ing.”

Merkel was making her first bilateral visit to Russia since Moscow annexed Ukraine’s Crimea peninsula in 2014, a move that set off the worst confrontat­ion between Moscow and the West since the Cold War.

Since Germany is holder of the rotating presidency of the G20 group of leading nations this year, Merkel has been meeting key members in preparatio­n for a summit.

Asked by a reporter if she feared Germany could be subject to Russian attempts to interfere in its forthcomin­g parliament­ary election by disseminat­ing fake news, Merkel took a firm line.

“I am not an anxious person, I will fight the election on the basis of my conviction­s,” she said, adding Germans would deal decisively with any cases of false informatio­n.

But Putin, standing alongside her, bristled at the suggestion Russia had meddled in the US presidenti­al election and that it was planning more of the same in Europe.

Allegation­s about Russia trying to get Donald Trump elected as US president were “rumors,” Putin said, generated as part of internal political battles in the United States.

“We never interfere in the political life and the political processes of other countries and we don’t want anybody interferin­g in our political life and foreign policy processes,” said Putin.

On the conflict in eastern Ukraine, where pro-Moscow separatist­s are fighting Kiev’s rule, Putin and Merkel said they agreed on the need for the full implementa­tion of the Minsk Protocol, an internatio­nally-brokered peace deal that is now effectivel­y stalled.

Putin however launched into an attack on the pro-Western administra­tion in Kiev, saying it – and not Russia or its allies – was forcing the separatist region away from Ukraine. That contradict­s Berlin’s position.

“The events in eastern Ukraine are the result of a coup d’etat, an unconstitu­tional change of power in Kiev,” Putin said, referring to street protests that forced out Ukraine’s previous, Moscow-leaning leader.

Asked by a reporter about a deadly poison gas contaminat­ion in the Syrian town of Khan Sheikhoun, which Western government­s said was a chemical weapons attack by Syrian government forces, Putin said that was unproven.

Touching on a sensitive point for the Russian authoritie­s, Merkel said she had raised concerns with Putin about police breaking up anti-Kremlin protests, as well as other issues that human rights organizati­ons say are a cause for alarm.

Those include reports, denied by the local authoritie­s, that homosexual­s are being detained and tortured in the Russian region of Chechnya, and a Supreme Court ruling last month banning the Jehovah’s Witnesses religious group as extremist.

“I have in my talks with the Russian president indicated how important the right to demonstrat­e is in a civil society and how important the role of NGOs is,” Merkel said.

“We have heard some very negative reports about the treatment of homosexual­s in Chechnya and I asked President Vladimir Putin to use his influence to guarantee minority rights here as well as with Jehovah’s witnesses.”

Putin denied that Russian police had violated protesters’ rights by arresting them, and fired a barb back at his European counterpar­ts.

“Russia’s law-enforcemen­t bodies behave in a far more restrained manner than their colleagues in other European countries,” Putin said, without specifying which countries he had in mind.

 ?? (Reuters) ?? RUSSIAN PRESIDENT Vladimir Putin and German Chancellor Angela Merkel arrive for a meeting at the Bocharov Ruchei state residence in Sochi yesterday.
(Reuters) RUSSIAN PRESIDENT Vladimir Putin and German Chancellor Angela Merkel arrive for a meeting at the Bocharov Ruchei state residence in Sochi yesterday.

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