Hull Daily Mail

EU agrees ban on most Russian oil

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EUROPEAN Union leaders agreed on Monday to embargo most Russian oil imports into the bloc by year-end as part of new sanctions on Moscow.

The compromise was made at a two-day summit focused on helping Ukraine with a long-delayed package of new financial support.

The embargo covers Russian oil brought in by sea, allowing a temporary exemption for imports delivered by pipeline, a move that was crucial to bring landlocked Hungary on board a decision that required consensus.

EU Council President Charles Michel said the agreement covers more than two-thirds of oil imports from Russia. Ursula Von der Leyen, the head of the EU’S executive branch, said the punitive move will “effectivel­y cut around 90% of oil imports from Russia to the EU by the end of the year”.

Mr Michel said leaders also agreed to provide Ukraine with a 9 billion-euro (£7.6 billion) tranche of assistance to support the war-torn country’s economy. It was unclear whether the money would come in grants or loans.

The new package of sanctions will also include an asset freeze and travel ban on individual­s, while Russia’s biggest bank, Sberbank, will be excluded from SWIFT, the major global system for financial transfers from which the EU previously banned several smaller Russian banks. Three big Russian state-owned broadcaste­rs will be prevented from distributi­ng their content in the EU.

“We want to stop Russia’s war machine,” Mr Michel said, lauding what he called a “remarkable achievemen­t”.

Mr Michel said the new sanctions, which needed the support of all 27 member countries, will be legally endorsed by Wednesday.

The EU had already imposed five previous rounds of sanctions on Russia over its war. It has targeted more than 1,000 people individual­ly, including Russian President Vladimir Putin and top government officials as well as pro-kremlin oligarchs, banks, the coal sector and more.

But the sixth package of measures announced on May 4 had been held up by concerns over oil supplies.

Both Mr Michel and Ms Von der Leyen said leaders will soon return to the issue, seeking to guarantee that Russia’s pipeline oil exports to the EU are banned at a later date.

Hungarian prime minister Viktor Orban had made clear he could support the new sanctions only if his country’s oil supply security was guaranteed. Hungary gets more than 60% of its oil from Russia and depends on crude that comes through the Soviet-era Druzhba pipeline.

Ms Von der Leyen had played down the chances of a breakthrou­gh at the summit. But leaders reached a compromise after Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky urged them to end “internal arguments that only prompt Russia to put more and more pressure on the whole of Europe”.

 ?? ?? European Council President Charles Michel
European Council President Charles Michel

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