Cape Argus

Russia offers citizenshi­p to Ukraine civilians

- dpa

MOSCOW offered yesterday to provide citizenshi­p to about 3 million Ukrainians from war-torn regions near the Russian border, in a move that has already riled Kiev and the European Union.

Russian President Vladimir Putin enacted the programme this year to expedite the citizenshi­p process for residents of Ukraine’s Donetsk and Luhansk regions, where a pro-Russian separatist rebellion has simmered for half a decade.

Kiev and the EU have condemned the programme as a means to absorb civilians from Ukrainian territory that Russia actually controls through pro-Russia rebel groups.

Russia similarly gave citizenshi­p to residents of neighbouri­ng Ukraine’s Crimea region after it occupied and annexed the territory in 2014.

“The total number of people who can utilise (the offer) is about 3 million citizens of Ukraine,” the head of the Interior Ministry’s migration department, Valentina Kazakova, said in comments carried by state news agency TASS.

That number had not previously been specified.

The conflict, between the rebels and the Ukrainian military, erupted in early 2014 after Ukraine ousted its pro-Russian president in a political pivot towards the West.

About 13000 people have been killed in the conflict, according to estimates by the UN.

While Putin has represente­d the rebels at internatio­nal peace talks, his government denies direct involvemen­t in the conflict. Ukraine accuses Russia of invasion.

Ukraine has threatened to revoke its citizenshi­p from those who obtain Russian passports via the programme.

In support of Ukraine, the EU has threatened not to recognise the Russian passports obtained through what it has denounced as an illegal method. |

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