Chattanooga Times Free Press

Putin derides martial law as political trick

- BY YURAS KARMANAU AND NATALIYA VASILYEVA

KIEV, Ukraine — Ukraine’s president donned combat fatigues to implement martial law in much of the country on Wednesday, a move Russia denounced as a cynical political trick as both sides ratcheted up tensions after a weekend standoff in the Black Sea.

Each side blamed the other for the bellicose turn of events, with Ukraine saying Russia is preparing for a full-scale invasion and Moscow calling it a political stunt by an unpopular president facing tough elections.

In Sunday’s confrontat­ion, three Ukrainian naval vessels were heading from the Black Sea into the Sea of Azov when they were blocked by the Russian coast guard near the Kerch Strait between Russia’s mainland and the Crimean Peninsula it annexed from Ukraine. After many tense hours of maneuverin­g, the Russians opened fire and seized the Ukrainian vessels and crew.

Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko responded by ordering martial law in much of the country, a move that went into effect with parliament­ary approval.

Poroshenko toured a military training center Wednesday in the Chernihiv region bordering Russia, one of the areas where martial law was imposed. Speaking to reporters as smoke billowed from a nearby shooting range, the camouflage-clad president pledged “not to allow the enemy to attack Ukraine” and announced a hike in salaries for servicemen.

Poroshenko initially sought to impose martial law for two months, a move that would have meant presidenti­al elections scheduled for March would have to be scrapped due to election rules. Facing criticism in parliament, he halved the martial law time frame to a month, which would allow the election to go ahead as planned.

In Moscow, Russian President Vladimir Putin bluntly accused his Ukrainian counterpar­t of provoking the naval incident in order to shore up his sagging popularity and sideline competitor­s ahead of the March election.

“The Black Sea incident certainly was a provocatio­n organized by the sitting government, including the incumbent president ahead of the presidenti­al vote in March,” Putin said, alleging that Poroshenko wanted to “exacerbate the situation and create obstacles for his rivals.”

Ukraine has insisted that its vessels were operating in line with internatio­nal maritime rules, while Russia claimed they had failed to get permission to pass through a Russia -controlled area. A 2003 treaty between the two countries designated the Kerch Strait and the Sea of Azov as shared territoria­l waters, but Russia claimed the strait in its entirety after annexing Crimea in 2014 and has sought to assert greater control over the passage.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? The damage on one of three Ukrainian ships is seen as it is docked on Monday after being seized on Sunday in Kerch, Crimea.
AP PHOTO The damage on one of three Ukrainian ships is seen as it is docked on Monday after being seized on Sunday in Kerch, Crimea.

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