Kuwait Times

Putin takes first train across Crimea bridge

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MOSCOW: President Vladimir Putin yesterday stood in the driver’s cabin of a train for the official opening of a railway bridge that links annexed Crimea to southern Russia.

During his ride starting in Kerch in Crimea in a shortened three-carriage train, Putin also spent time drinking tea with engineers on the 227-billion-ruble ($3.6-billion) project. The rail bridge, which Putin praised as “magnificen­t,” is 19 kilometers (12 miles) long. The bridge for car traffic opened in May last year when the president drove a truck across it.

The total rail route from the northweste­rn city of Saint Petersburg to the Crimean port city of Sevastopol covers a distance of 2,500 kilometers (1,550 miles). Putin said the bridge would

restore rail links to Crimea severed in 2014 when Moscow annexed the peninsula, sparking an ongoing separatist conflict in eastern Ukraine that has claimed some 13,000 lives.

The company of Putin’s close ally, billionair­e businessma­n Arkady Rotenberg, won the constructi­on contract for the bridge. He sold the company last month. Putin told workers an anecdote about receiving an emotional call from “your main boss with the simple Russian surname Rotenberg,” after the completion of a key stage of the project. “He called me at night and spoke in such a voice that I asked him ‘Have you been drinking?’” said the strongman.

The coverage of the project has been reminiscen­t of Soviet infrastruc­ture projects, with a newsreader on state-controlled Rossiya 24 television channel calling the opening “without exaggerati­on historic.”

Russia says it is the longest in Europe. Ukraine was unhappy about both the rail link and Putin’s presence at the opening. President Volodymyr Zelensky’s representa­tive office for Crimea said in a statement on Facebook that the rail link and Putin’s visit to Crimea were “a gross breach by the Russian side of Ukraine’s sovereignt­y and territoria­l integrity.”

It showed “disregard by the Kremlin of the universall­y recognized principles and norms of internatio­nal law,” the statement said. —AFP

 ??  ?? TAMAN: Russian President Vladimir Putin (center) listens to Transport Minister Yevgeny Ditrikh after the opening ceremony of the railway part of the Crimean Bridge, connecting Crimea to mainland Russia in Taman yesterday. —AFP
TAMAN: Russian President Vladimir Putin (center) listens to Transport Minister Yevgeny Ditrikh after the opening ceremony of the railway part of the Crimean Bridge, connecting Crimea to mainland Russia in Taman yesterday. —AFP

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