Los Angeles Times

EU adds to blacklist of Russians

The group acts in response to violence in eastern Ukraine, where militants take over another regional headquarte­rs.

- By Henry Chu and Carol J. Williams henry.chu@latimes.com carol.williams@latimes.com Chu reported from London and Williams from Los Angeles.

LONDON — The European Union added 15 names to its list of those sanctioned in response to worsening violence in Ukraine, where separatist­s clubbed their way into control of another regional government headquarte­rs Tuesday.

The EU blacklist, enacted more than a month ago, was meant to deter Russian support of the militants, but has had no visible inf luence on the escalating disorder in a dozen eastern Ukrainian towns and cities where the pro-Russia gunmen have taken over government facilities.

Tuesday’s expansion adds penalties against government officials in the inner circle of Russian President Vladimir Putin.

A top official of the Organizati­on for Security and Cooperatio­n in Europe also appealed Tuesday for restoratio­n of the “rule of law” and the release of journalist­s and a group of six foreign observers and an interprete­r from the security alliance, which counts Russia and Ukraine among its 57 members. The team and at least two Ukrainian journalist­s have been held in the eastern Ukrainian city of Slovyansk since last week.

Two British television journalist­s also were attacked Monday by separatist protesters at a rally in Donetsk, another eastern city, said Dunja Mijatovic, OSCE media freedom chief.

“Impunity for assailants of journalist­s and broadcaste­rs is escalating the tensions and contributi­ng to the deteriorat­ion of the security situation,” Mijatovic said in a statement from OSCE headquarte­rs in Vien- na. “I am dismayed by the lack of response by the law enforcemen­t authoritie­s to these attacks. Rule of law must be reintroduc­ed in Ukraine.”

On Tuesday, about 150 militants armed with clubs and baseball bats drove out local police from the Luhansk regional administra­tion building. A day earlier, Mayor Gennady Kernes of Kharkiv, Ukraine’s secondlarg­est city, was shot in the back while exercising on the city outskirts. He remained in serious condition Tuesday after undergoing surgery in Israel.

In Kiev, the Ukrainian capital, Deputy Foreign Minister Danylo Lubkivsky repeated the government’s accusation that the unrest was being directed by the Kremlin.

“They have no political goals, and they have no intention of holding any dialogue. They simply execute orders from Russian authoritie­s,” Lubkivsky said of the gunmen, many in Russian military garb and carrying weapons used by the Russian army.

The EU foreign ministers who agreed to new sanctions released the names of the new targets Tuesday. They include Deputy Prime Min- ister Dmitry Kozak; parliament­ary leaders Ludmila Shvetsova and Sergei Neverov; Valery Gerasimov, the military chief of staff; and Igor Sergun, head of Russia’s main armed forces intelligen­ce directorat­e. All played key roles in the seizure and annexation last month of Ukraine’s Crimea territory.

Unlike the U.S., which has gone after oligarchs and economic targets, Europe has confined its sanctions to political and military figures. The EU relies heavily on Russian energy and trade and is divided over stronger action against Moscow that might hurt Europe’s economic prospects.

Still, EU leaders have been alarmed by the escalating breakdown of law and order in eastern Ukraine and by what they see as Russia’s abetting of the destabiliz­ing forces.

“The downward spiral of violence and intimidati­on undermines the normal functionin­g of the legitimate state institutio­ns” in eastern Ukraine, said Catherine Ashton, the EU’s top diplomat. “A number of people have been killed, wounded, tortured or kidnapped in the last few days.”

Many analysts say that the Kremlin probably is not contemplat­ing a military incursion in or annexation of eastern Ukraine, as happened with Crimea in the south. Still, Russia has an interest in stoking tension there to keep the government in Kiev off balance and to undermine a May 25 presidenti­al election to permanentl­y replace Kremlin ally Viktor Yanukovich, who was driven from office in February.

 ?? Zurab Kurtsikidz­e
European Pressphoto Agency ?? PRO-RUSSIA SEPARATIST­S, left, block Ukrainian riot police in the courtyard of the regional administra­tion building in Luhansk.
Zurab Kurtsikidz­e European Pressphoto Agency PRO-RUSSIA SEPARATIST­S, left, block Ukrainian riot police in the courtyard of the regional administra­tion building in Luhansk.

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