The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Putin defends ‘lawful’ seizure of Ukrainian ships

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French cops in deathin-custody case testify as ‘assisted witnesses’ What were they (Russian forces) supposed to do? They were fulfilling their military duty. They were fulfilling their lawful functions in protecting Russia’s borders. They would do the same in your country.

MOSCOW: President Vladimir Putin has insisted that Russian forces were in the right to seize three Ukrainian ships last weekend, but President Donald Trump expressed ‘deep concern’ at Moscow’s actions against a US ally.

In his first extensive remarks since the confrontat­ion at sea on Sunday, Putin said it had been orchestrat­ed by Kiev as a ‘provocatio­n’.

He said the Ukrainian ships had entered Russian territoria­l waters and refused to respond to requests to stop from Russian patrol boats.

“What were they (Russian forces) supposed to do?” Putin said on Wednesday, when asked about the incident at an internatio­nal investment forum in Moscow.

“They were fulfilling their military duty. They were fulfilling their lawful functions in protecting Russia’s borders. They would do the same in your country.”

Moscow and Kiev have traded angry accusation­s since Russian navy vessels fired on, boarded and captured the three Ukrainian ships off the coast of Crimea.

After warning of the threat of “full-scale war”, Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko on Wednesday signed an act imposing martial law for 30 days in regions bordering Russia, the Black Sea and the Sea of Azov.

He also appealed to Nato members including Germany to send naval vessels to the region to back his country in the standoff.

“Germany is one of our closest allies, and we hope that states within Nato are now ready to relocate naval ships to the Sea of Azov in order to assist Ukraine and provide security,” he said in comments published yesterday by Germany’s Bild daily.

Western government­s have rallied behind Kiev, accusing Russia of illegally blocking access to the Sea of Azov, used by both PARIS: Three French police officers who two years ago arrested a young man who later died in custody, sparking violent protests in Paris suburbs, have been given the status of special witnesses and not defendants as the man’s family had demanded.

The investigat­ing magistrate decided to make the officers ‘assisted witnesses’ after questionin­g them this week for the first time about the detention of 24-year-old Adama Traore on July 19, 2016.

That status, which in French law sits between being a simple witness and someone who has been indicted, means the magistrate did not directly regard them as having committed a crime.

The decision will do little to defuse the distrust towards authoritie­s repeatedly expressed by Traore’s family and some in the local community.

Hundreds of youths in the tough northern Paris suburbs around where he had lived rampaged in protest for five nights after his death, clashing with police and setting vehicles on fire.

The anger at the time was fuelled by a delay in officials announcing that Traore had died in custody 90 minutes after his arrest, and the fact that he was still handcuffed when paramedics arrived.

An initial autopsy suggesting Traore had been suffering heart disease and an infection was later rejected by medical experts.

The officers’ legal team said in a statement yesterday that the magistrate’s decision stemmed from ‘the absence of serious and corroborat­ing evidence’ that the policemen had not attempted to help Traore.

“The dossier shows that they called for paramedics with rapidity and diligence and that they gave assistance to Mr Traore,” they asserted.

“The theory of deliberate violence leading to the involuntar­y death of Mr Traore is discarded,” they wrote.

The hearings before the magistrate on Tuesday and Wednesday followed a September forensic report that determined that Traore had been suffering Sickle cell disease, a rare genetic blood disorder. — AFP countries, and of using force without justificat­ion.

Trump on Tuesday threatened to cancel planned talks with Putin at this week’s G20 summit in Buenos Aires over the incident.

The White House on Wednesday said Trump and Turkish counterpar­t Recep Tayyip Erdogan discussed the UkraineRus­sia incident by telephone and ‘the two leaders expressed deep concern about the incident in the Kerch Strait and the continued detainment of Ukraine’s vessels and crew members’.

The Kremlin said it still expected the Putin-Trump meeting to take place and played down the threat of cancellati­on, with foreign policy advisor Yuri Ushakov saying: “The meeting is equally needed by both sides.”

The Ukrainian vessels — a tug and two gunboats — were trying to pass through the Kerch Strait from the Black Sea to the Sea of Azov, but were refused access and chased into internatio­nal waters by 10 Russian vessels.

Kiev has demanded the return of its ships and the release of 24 sailors taken prisoner during the confrontat­ion.

The sailors have been put before a court in Simferopol, the main city in Russian-annexed Crimea, and ordered to be held in pre-trial detention for two months.

Detention orders were made against 15 of them on Tuesday, including three still in hospital, and nine more on Wednesday.

“We condemn this demonstrat­ion of barbarism and are multiplyin­g our efforts to bring our boys home,” Ukrainian Prime Minister Volodymyr Groysman said on Twitter after the court rulings.

Sunday’s incident was the first direct confrontat­ion between Ukraine and Russia in the longrunnin­g conflict pitting Kiev against Moscow and Russianbac­ked separatist­s in the country’s

Vladimir Putin, President

east.

It has raised fears of a wider escalation — in a conflict that has killed more than 10,000 people since 2014 — and prompted internatio­nal calls for restraint.

Russian military officials said Wednesday that Moscow would soon deploy more of its advanced S-400 air defence systems in Crimea, which Russia annexed from Ukraine in 2014.

The Ukrainian parliament voted on Monday in favour of Poroshenko’s request for martial law, which gives authoritie­s the power to mobilise citizens with military experience, regulate the media and restrict public rallies in certain areas.

The European Union on Wednesday strongly condemned Russia’s actions but, after three days of debate, failed to agree to threaten new sanctions.

“We are dismayed at this use of force by Russia which, against the backdrop of increasing militarisa­tion in the area, is unacceptab­le,” EU foreign policy chief Federica Mogherini said.

The statement will disappoint some EU members hoping for a harder joint line, after officials earlier said the bloc was considerin­g new sanctions against Moscow. Meanwhile, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov accused the United States and Europe of encouragin­g Ukraine. — AFP

 ??  ?? Poroshenko visits the 169th training centre ‘Desna’ of the Ukrainian Army ground forces in Chernihiv Region, Ukraine. — Reuters photo
Poroshenko visits the 169th training centre ‘Desna’ of the Ukrainian Army ground forces in Chernihiv Region, Ukraine. — Reuters photo
 ??  ?? A crew member (left) of one of Ukrainian naval ships, which were recently seized by Russia’s FSB security service, is escorted after a court hearing in Simferopol, Crimea. — Reuters photo
A crew member (left) of one of Ukrainian naval ships, which were recently seized by Russia’s FSB security service, is escorted after a court hearing in Simferopol, Crimea. — Reuters photo

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