Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Eu-ukraine trade deal comes into force, angers Moscow

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Ukraine’s free-trade deal with the EU comes into effect from yesterday, coinciding with the start of Moscow’s food embargo against Kiev that will force the impoverish­ed former Soviet republic to revisit its economic model.

The free-trade accord is part of the broader EU Associatio­n Agreement -- signed at the end of June 2014 -and stands at the heart of the drastic deteriorat­ion of Ukraine’s relations with Russia, furious at seeing its Soviet-era satellite turn to the West.

Ukraine, whose market has been traditiona­lly oriented toward Russia, will now have to turn itself toward the European market and abide by its rules.

“The agreement will contribute to the modernisat­ion and diversific­ation of the Ukrainian economy and will create additional incentives for reform,” the European Commission said in a statement on Thursday.

Brussels also said the deal would help Ukraine improve its business climate and attract foreign investment, a view shared by Yegor Perelygin, an analyst at Unicredit bank.

The road to Ukraine’s adoption of the deal has been peppered with obstacles.

In November 2013, Ukraine’s then pro-kremlin president Viktor Yanukovych rejected the associatio­n agreement, triggering pro-european protests that led to his downfall and eventually to the armed conflict in eastern Ukraine, which has left more than 9,000 people dead.

Fearing the deal could see its market flooded with European goods, Russia has taken retaliator­y measures, suspending its free-trade agreement with Ukraine and banning the import of Ukrainian food starting on Friday.

Prime Minister Arseny Yatsenyuk has put the cost of Moscow’s measures to his country at some $600 million.

President Petro Poroshenko admitted earlier this month that Russia’s retaliator­y move would cause “damage” to Ukraine’s economy but said he was “ready to pay the price” and press on with efforts to join a European Union free-trade zone.

He blasted the embargo in his New Year address, saying Moscow was trying to “economical­ly strangle” Ukraine.

“Moscow closing its market to Ukrainian merchandis­e, a powerful economic attack, is another part of the war (...) against us,” Poroshenko said.

Kiev has vowed to strike back with its own measures and is expected to announce a list of banned Russian products in the near future.

Ukraine mostly exported agricultur­al products, vegetables, fruit, dairy and sweets to Russia, with the countries’ trade ties shrinking by 70 percent compared to 2011, according to Russia’s deputy minister of economic developmen­t Alexei Likhachev.

THE AGREEMENT WILL CONTRIBUTE TO THE MODERNISAT­ION AND DIVERSIFIC­ATION OF THE UKRAINIAN ECONOMY AND WILL CREATE ADDITIONAL INCENTIVES FOR REFORM

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