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Tuesday, November 27, 2018

Crimean court orders Ukrainian sailors to be detained for two months

A judge in the Crimean town of Simferopol said Tuesday that Vladimir Varimez, Yuri Budzylo and Vladimir Tereshchenko have been arrested and will be held until January 25, 2019, according to Russian state news agency RIA.
The decision comes after a confrontation between the two countries on Sunday around a waterway linking the Azov Sea and the Black Sea, when Russia fired on and seized three Ukrainian navy ships and detained 24 Ukrainian sailors.
Ukraine and Russia have offered conflicting accounts of the incident, each accusing the other of violating the laws of the sea.
Ukraine said two of its small gunboats and one tugboat were attacked by Russian naval forces Sunday after entering the Kerch Strait en route to the city of Mariupol.
Video of the incident released by Ukrainian officials appeared to show a Russian ship ramming the Ukrainian tugboat.
The incident provoked fury in Kiev, while Russia accused Ukraine of acting as the aggressor and called the incident a "dangerous provocation" by Kiev.
The Kerch Strait -- a shallow, narrow stretch of water just two to three miles wide at one point -- connects the Azov Sea with the Black Sea and runs between the Crimean Peninsula and Russia. It is an important economic lifeline for Ukraine, as it allows its ships to access the Black Sea.
It's also the closest point of access for Russia to Crimea, which Moscow annexed from Ukraine in 2014. A Russian-built bridge over the Kerch Strait was opened in May.
A 2003 agreement confirms the Azov Sea and the Kerch Strait as domestic waters of Russia and Ukraine.

Ukraine to impose martial law

On Monday, the Ukrainian parliament voted to introduce martial law from Wednesday in select regions for 30 days, said the Ukrainian news agency Ukrinform, endorsing an emergency proposal introduced by Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko.
In a statement on Twitter, Poroshenko said martial law would be introduced only in regions bordering Russia, or adjacent to regions where Russian troops are posted. That includes regions bordering the Azov and Black Seas and a portion of the border with Moldova's Transnistria region, where Russian troops are stationed.
A ship under the the Kerch bridge blocks the passage to the Kerch Strait near Kerch, Crimea, on Sunday.
On Tuesday, Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said Ukraine's decision to introduce martial law had a "barely camouflaged" political agenda, although he added that the move was an internal matter for Kiev.
Russia's bridge to Crimea: A metaphor for the Putin era
"This is Ukraine's internal business," Peskov said before adding, "Against the background of the electoral processes, of course, such decision to impose martial law has a very specific, barely camouflaged overtone."
Ukraine is slated to have presidential elections in March, after the period of martial law expires.
Russia and Ukraine have been locked in long-simmering conflict since the annexation of Crimea by Russia in 2014, and a war with Russian-backed separatists in the country's east has claimed more than 10,000 lives.

West criticizes Russian aggression

Sunday's incident has sparked international condemnation over Russia's use of force.
During an emergency UN Security Council meeting to defuse rising tensions after the confrontation, US Ambassador Nikki Haley called the incident "yet another reckless Russian escalation" and demanded that the Kremlin release the sailors.
Nikki Haley during a United Nations Security Council meeting on Ukraine on Monday in New York.
"Impeding Ukraine's lawful transit through the Kerch Strait is a violation under international law. It is an arrogant act that the international community must condemn and will never accept," Haley said Monday.
European member states of the UN Security Council -- including France, the Netherlands, Poland, Sweden and the UK -- also issued a statement calling on Russia to restore freedom of passage at the Kerch Strait.

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