Secretary of State John Kerry on Thursday accused Russia of inaction in
helping to ease the tense situation in eastern Ukraine, warning that the
United States is ready to impose additional sanctions in response.
In a statement made to the press, the top American envoy alleged that Russia has refused to take "a single concrete step in the right direction" for the past seven days since the US, the European Union, Russia and Ukraine agreed in Geneva, Switzerland, to takes steps to de-escalate tension in eastern Ukraine.
25/4/14
------------------------------
------------------------------
Remarks on Ukraine
Remarks
And by complying with
actions requested by Russia, like removing the barricades in the Maidan
and cleaning up the square and ensuring that all ongoing demonstrations
in Kyiv are actually government-approved and peaceful, Ukraine is
thereby taking tangible, concrete steps to move beyond the division of
the last months. That is how a government defines keeping your word.
That is leadership that upholds both the spirit and the letter of a
Geneva agreement..................................http://www.state.gov/secretary/remarks/2014/04/225166.htm
In a statement made to the press, the top American envoy alleged that Russia has refused to take "a single concrete step in the right direction" for the past seven days since the US, the European Union, Russia and Ukraine agreed in Geneva, Switzerland, to takes steps to de-escalate tension in eastern Ukraine.
- He warned that "window to change course" was closing for Russia and that the US was "ready to act" by imposing more sanctions on Moscow.
25/4/14
------------------------------
------------------------------
Remarks on Ukraine
Remarks
John Kerry
Secretary of State
Secretary of State
State Department Press Briefing Room
Washington, DC
April 24, 2014
----
It has now been a week since the United States, the
European Union, Russia, and Ukraine met in Geneva. We did so after a
phone call between President Putin and President Obama, in which both
leaders expressed a desire to avoid further escalation in Ukraine. We
met in Geneva with a clear mission: to improve security conditions and
find political solutions to the conflict threatening the sovereignty and
unity of Ukraine. And right there in Geneva, EU High Representative
Ashton and I made clear that both Russia and Ukraine had to demonstrate
more than good faith. They needed to take concrete actions in order to
meet their commitments.
The simple reality is
you can’t resolve a crisis when only one side is willing to do what is
necessary to avoid a confrontation. Every day since we left Geneva –
every day, even up to today, when Russia sent armored battalions right
up the Luhansk Oblast border – the world has witnessed a tale of two
countries, two countries with vastly different understandings of what it
means to uphold an international agreement.
One week later, it is
clear that only one side, one country, is keeping its word. And for
anyone who wants to create gray areas out of black, or find in the fine
print crude ways to justify crude actions, let’s get real – the Geneva
agreement is not open to interpretation. It is not vague. It is not
subjective. It is not optional. What we agreed to in Geneva is as
simple as it is specific.
We agreed that all
sides would refrain from violence, intimidation, and taking provocative
actions. We agreed that illegal groups would lay down their arms and
that, in exchange for amnesty, they would hand over the public buildings
and spaces that they occupied. We agreed that to implement these
objectives – and this is important, to implement this – monitors from
the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe would have
unfettered access to parts of Ukraine where they were needed most. And
we agreed that all parties would work to create that access and to
provide help to the OSCE in order to do this. We agreed that the OSCE
would report from the ground whether the rights, security, and dignity
of Ukrainian citizens was being protected.
From day one, the
Government of Ukraine started making good on its commitments – from day
one. From day one, Prime Minister Yatsenyuk has kept his word. He
immediately agreed to help vacate buildings. He suspended Ukraine’s
counterterrorism initiative over Easter, choosing de-escalation, despite
Ukraine’s legitimate, fundamental right to defend its own territory and
its own people. From day one, the Ukrainian Government sent senior
officials to work with the OSCE, in keeping with the agreement, to send
them to work in regions where Russia had voiced its most urgent concerns
about the security of Russian speakers and ethnic Russians. And on day
one, Prime Minister Yatsenyuk went on live television and committed his
government publicly to all of the people of Ukraine that – and these
are his words – committed them to undertake comprehensive constitutional
reform that will strengthen the powers of the regions. He directly
addressed the concerns expressed by the Russians, and he did so on day
one.
He also made a personal
appeal to Russian-speaking Ukrainians, pledging to support – and again,
these are his words – a special status to the Russian language and the
protection of the language. And in keeping with his Geneva commitments,
Prime Minister Yatsenyuk has publicly announced amnesty legislation –
once more, in his words – for all those who surrender arms, come out of
the premises and will begin with the Ukrainian people to build a
sovereign and independent Ukraine. That is a promise made by the
interim government to the people of Ukraine.
24/4/14
Ukraine: la situation reste tendue, nouvelle mise en garde de Washington...
ReplyDeleteLa tension reste vive vendredi en Ukraine, au lendemain d'un assaut meurtrier contre les séparatistes dans l'est du pays dénoncé par la Russie, qui a elle-même écopé d'une sévère mise en garde des Etats-Unis.
La Russie "n'a pas pris la moindre initiative" pour mettre en œuvre l'accord conclu à Genève pour faire baisser la tension en Ukraine, a accusé jeudi soir le secrétaire d'Etat américain John Kerry, dénonçant "une erreur coûteuse".
Il a également accusé la Russie de faire "des efforts démesurés pour saboter activement le processus démocratique par le biais d'une campagne d'intimidation grossière" en Ukraine, qualifiant les nouveaux exercices menés à la frontière par l'armée russe de "menaçants".
Ces manœuvres étaient destinées à riposter à l'assaut lancé par Kiev contre les séparatistes à Slaviansk, bastion des insurgés pro-russes................http://www.rtbf.be/info/monde/detail_ukraine-la-tension-reste-vive-washington-met-en-garde-moscou?id=8254848
25/4/14
US warns Russia against making ‘expensive mistake’ in Ukraine...
ReplyDeleteUS Secretary of State John Kerry warned Russia Thursday against making an “expensive mistake” in Ukraine, telling Moscow that time was running out for it to change course as Russia ordered fresh military drills along its shared border with Ukraine.
Kerry, who was speaking in Washington, accused Moscow of a "full-throated effort to actively sabotage the democratic process through gross external intimidation" and described the new Russian military exercises on the border of Ukraine as "threatening".
"Let me be clear: if Russia continues in this direction it will not just be a grave mistake, it will be an expensive mistake," the veteran diplomat said, adding "we are ready to act" as Washington tees up new economic sanctions against Moscow...................http://www.france24.com/en/20140425-us-warns-russia-against-expensive-mistake-ukraine-military-drills-sanctions/
25/4/14
Standard & Poor's Downgrades Russia's Credit Rating to BBB- ...
ReplyDeleteCredit agency Standard & Poor's has cut Russia's foreign currency sovereign ratings, in a move that underscores the economic risks of President Vladimir Putin's policy in Ukraine.
The agency cut both long- and short-term foreign currency ratings, to BBB-/A-3 from BBB/A-2, a decision that pushed Russia's already battered assets further down early on Friday.
"The downgrade reflects the risk we perceive of a continuation of the large financial outflows observed in the first quarter of 2014, during which the size of Russia's financial account deficit was almost twice that of the current account surplus," the agency said in a press release.
Central bank data released earlier this month showed an estimated $63.7 billion in net capital outflows in the first three months of 2014, the same as for the whole of 2013. The World Bank has said this year's total could reach $150 billion...........http://www.themoscowtimes.com/article/498911.html
25/4/14
Moscow to block distortion of Geneva accords on Ukraine - Lavrov....
ReplyDeleteRussia will block all attempts to distort the Geneva agreement reached last week on settling the Ukrainian crisis, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said Friday. "To complain to us that we have signed something in Geneva that legitimizes the actions of the current regime [in Ukraine] and demand that we take some de-escalating steps only in the southeast, is simply a lie. Therefore, we will insist on respecting the Geneva Accords and will categorically reject attempts for them to be distorted," Lavrov said during a CIS Youth Diplomats Forum.
"US propaganda power has always been aimed at and continues being aimed at distorting the picture of what is happening in Ukraine, smearing the Russian Federation and smearing those who protest against the illegitimate actions of powers trying to ban the Russian language," he added.
Lavrov earlier said Washington cites "incredible arguments" justifying Kiev's failure to comply with the Geneva agreements on Ukraine. "When we demanded full commitment to the Geneva Accords, to begin with the release of the seized buildings in Kiev, you know what the US replied?" Lavrov asked, referring to a recent statement by US Assistant Secretary of State Victoria Nuland.
In an interview with CNN earlier this week, Nuland said: "You can't compare the situation in Kiev, where now everything that is still being held by protesters is being held with licenses and with the agreement of the government of Ukraine, with the agreement of the Rada, or with regular leases from the owners of the buildings."......Read more: http://voiceofrussia.com/news/2014_04_25/Moscow-to-block-distortion-of-Geneva-accords-on-Ukraine-Lavrov-4867/
25/4/14