Bangkok Post

Parliament declares martial law

- BLOOMBERG

KIEV: Ukraine imposed martial law in some regions a day after its navy was fired on by Russia in a major re-escalation of hostilitie­s that drew condemnati­ons of the Kremlin from the US and the European Union.

President Petro Poroshenko said martial law was needed to ready Ukraine for potential further Russian aggression amid fears Sunday’s incident near Crimea would rekindle the simmering four-year-old conflict between the two former allies. Yesterday, he said Ukraine’s “top priority” now is the return of 23 captured sailors and three ships.

While Ukraine’s Western partners blamed Russia, calls for harsher sanctions were only heard from smaller nations. Russia’s ruble partially rebounded yesterday from a selloff in the previous session.

After nearly a day of silence, President Donald Trump said he wasn’t happy about the situation, adding that “hopefully it’ll get straighten­ed out”. The sense that it’s largely Europe’s problem to solve reflects the view at the White House, according to one person close to the situation.

The renewed tensions stem from events in the waters near the Crimean peninsula that President Vladimir Putin annexed almost five years ago, reviving Cold War animosity. Six Ukrainian sailors were wounded as the ships were seized by Russia, which accused its neighbour of allowing boats to stray into its territory. Ukraine says the incident occurred in neutral waters.

Nikki Haley, the US ambassador to the United Nations, blamed Russia’s “outlaw actions”. The US will maintain its current Crimea-related sanctions, Ms Haley said in a speech, stopping short of threatenin­g additional restrictio­ns. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo urged Mr Poroshenko and Mr Putin “to engage directly to resolve this situation” and said the US continues to reject Russia’s annexation of Crimea.

Mr Poroshenko said on Twitter that he spoke earlier with Mr Pompeo.

German Chancellor Angel Merkel, who spoke with Mr Putin about the crisis on Monday, offered to help Mr Poroshenko de-escalate the situation, which comes days before a Group of 20 gathering in Buenos Aires. Reviving the patriotic fervor that accompanie­d Mr Putin’s annexation of Crimea in 2014 could help him offset growing domestic discontent over the economy and changes to Russia’s pension system.

“This type of foreign policy escalation is risky and won’t help relations with the West,” said Alexander Baunov of the Moscow Carnegie Center. “But if they swallow it, then it will look like another diplomatic victory”.

The martial law measures for coastal regions and those bordering Russia will run for 30 days, a scaled-down version of Poroshenko’s original plan for a twomonth spell.

He was forced to compromise after some opposition politician­s said he was seeking to delay March’s presidenti­al elections, which polls suggest he’ll lose.

“As soon as a Russian soldier crosses a border, I won’t waste a second to ensure the defence of Ukrainian territory,” Mr Poroshenko told lawmakers.

With Ukraine’s finances under pressure from looming foreign-debt payments on stress on other emerging markets, there was concern that martial law could obstruct internatio­nal aid payments.

 ?? AFP ?? MPs react as Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko delivers his speech from parliament tribune ahead of a parliament­ary vote on his request to impose martial law in the country.
AFP MPs react as Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko delivers his speech from parliament tribune ahead of a parliament­ary vote on his request to impose martial law in the country.

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