Russia eases passport rules for east Ukrainians

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People in the self-proclaimed Donetsk Republic await Denis Pushilin, the acting leader, in November 2018

President Vladimir Putin signed a decree on Wednesday that makes it easier for those living in eastern Ukraine’s separatist territories to access a Russian passport. The move is seen as a challenge to Volodmyr Zelensky, the former comedian elected president this weekend. In a Facebook post, Zelensky’s team has labelled Russia “an aggressor state which wages war against Ukraine”. Mr Putin said the new law is “purely a humanitarian issue”. The decree is aimed at people living in the unrecognised republics of Donetsk and Luhansk, seized by Russian-backed separatists in 2014 after Russia annexed Crimea from Ukraine.

Mr Putin said people living in these areas were “completely deprived of civil rights” and could not “move normally” or “realise their most elementary needs”. “We have no desire to create problems for the new Ukrainian authorities,” Mr Putin added. What’s the background? Conflict in the region has claimed about 13,000 lives since Moscow annexed Kiev’s Crimea peninsula in 2014.Mr Zelensky was elected as Ukraine’s next president at the weekend with no previous political experience except playing the role of president in a comedy television show.

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Outgoing president Petro Poroshenko said Volodymyr Zelensky is too inexperienced to stand up to Russia effectively

In the run up to his election, he said he wanted to “renew relations” with eastern Ukraine and start a “powerful information war to end the conflict”.In response, Russia says it wants him to show “sound judgement”, “honesty” and “pragmatism” so that relations can improve. In the Facebook post, Zelensky’s team said through the decree Russia had “acknowledged its responsibility as an occupier state”. “This decree is not bringing us closer to achieving the ultimate goal: a cease-fire,” it said. The message called on the international community to provide “diplomatic pressure and the pressure of sanctions”. What has the reaction been? Ukraine’s foreign minister Pavlo Klimkin labelled the decision a “continuation of aggression and interference in our internal affairs” and urged the residents of eastern Ukraine not to accept the passports.In a Twitter post, he told them: “Russia has deprived you of the present, and now it is trespassing on your future.” Hopes for a fresh start killed off by Russia Analysis by Jonah Fisher, BBC News, Kiev There had been a school of thought that the election of Voldymyr Zelensky might bring fresh life to efforts to solve the conflict in eastern Ukraine. During the campaign he’d made vague if slightly conciliatory noises about the important of dialogue and talks. Russia seems to have killed any prospect of that. Firstly, Moscow held off from congratulating Mr Zelensky for his landslide win. Then just three days after the vote, Vladimir Putin announced that he’ll give Russian passports to people, who everyone bar Russia, regards as Ukrainians living on Ukrainian soil. In Kiev it’s being seen another step towards eventual Russian annexation.Mr Zelensky has been left with no choice. He’s issued a statement condemning the Russian move and calling for increased pressure through diplomacy and sanctions. It’s the sort of wording we’ve become used to seeing in the last five years from Ukraine. The fact that this time it’s come from Mr Zelensky suggests that relations are unlikely to improve. Iryna Gersaschenko, the deputy speaker of the Ukrainian parliament, noted the timing of the announcement. Mr Putin “always uses moments of uncertainty and transition periods to plunge another knife into Ukraine’s back,” she said.

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Reuters

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President Putin delivered the speech announcing the passport policy to lawmakers in Saint Petersburg, Russia on April 24

She labelled the decision a “gross violation” of peace agreements signed by Russia, Ukraine, France and Germany in 2015. In a tweet, Lithuanian foreign minister Linas Linkevicius noted how Mr Putin used “passportization” in the breakaway Georgian areas of Abkhazia in 2002 and then South Ossetia in 2008, resulting in a 20% occupation of Georgian territory.

Referring to the announcement being made shortly after the election result, Ukrainian deputy foreign minister Sergiy Kyslytsya called the move a “time-based action” and said it was a challenge “not only for Kiev but Berlin, Paris, Brussels and Washington”. He called for immediate action.

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