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среда, 28 ноября 2018 г.

«Breaking News» Furious Putin accuses Ukraine of playing 'a dirty game' as Poroshenko signs martial law act

Vladimir Putin has accused Ukraine of playing a 'dirty game' and orchestrating a naval 'provocation' in the Black Sea over the weekend.


The Russian President laid the blame for the crisis on his Kiev counterpart Petro Poroshenko and his desire to secure re-election.


Moscow seized three Ukrainian naval vessels and their crews on Sunday over what it said was their illegal entry into Russian waters - something Kiev denies.


Western governments have accused Russia of acting illegally and US President Donald Trump has said he is considering cancelling planned talks with Putin at this week's G20 summit in Buenos Aires.


It comes as Poroshenko signed a martial law act and warned of the threat of 'full-scale war' with Russia. The Kremlin this morning vowed to send more of its feared S-400 surface-to-air missile systems to the Crimean peninsula soon. 


Amid mounting tensions, Moscow also revealed a cache of weapons it claimed were seized from the Ukrainian warships detained off the Crimean coast on Sunday.




Ukraine's president has warned of the threat of 'full-scale war' with Russia amid escalating tensions between the ex-Soviet neighbours. Russia says these weapons were seized from Ukrainian ships off Crimea on Sunday


Ukraine's president has warned of the threat of 'full-scale war' with Russia amid escalating tensions between the ex-Soviet neighbours. Russia says these weapons were seized from Ukrainian ships off Crimea on Sunday



Ukraine's president has warned of the threat of 'full-scale war' with Russia amid escalating tensions between the ex-Soviet neighbours. Russia says these weapons were seized from Ukrainian ships off Crimea on Sunday





Moscow revealed a cache of weapons it claimed were seized from the Ukrainian warships detained off the Crimean coast on Sunday


Moscow revealed a cache of weapons it claimed were seized from the Ukrainian warships detained off the Crimean coast on Sunday



Moscow revealed a cache of weapons it claimed were seized from the Ukrainian warships detained off the Crimean coast on Sunday





Ukrainian leader Petro Poroshenko said 'I don't want anyone to think this is fun and games' as he addressed the crisis which unfolded when Russian forces seized three Ukrainian ships in the Black Sea


Ukrainian leader Petro Poroshenko said 'I don't want anyone to think this is fun and games' as he addressed the crisis which unfolded when Russian forces seized three Ukrainian ships in the Black Sea



Ukrainian leader Petro Poroshenko said 'I don't want anyone to think this is fun and games' as he addressed the crisis which unfolded when Russian forces seized three Ukrainian ships in the Black Sea





The Kremlin this morning vowed to send more of its feared S-400 surface-to-air missile systems (file picture) to the Crimean peninsula soon


The Kremlin this morning vowed to send more of its feared S-400 surface-to-air missile systems (file picture) to the Crimean peninsula soon



The Kremlin this morning vowed to send more of its feared S-400 surface-to-air missile systems (file picture) to the Crimean peninsula soon






Yesterday, a Crimean court ordered three of the captured men to be held in custody for the next two months on accusations of crossing into Russian territory illegally


Yesterday, a Crimean court ordered three of the captured men to be held in custody for the next two months on accusations of crossing into Russian territory illegally






Yesterday, a Crimean court ordered three of the captured men to be held in custody for the next two months on accusations of crossing into Russian territory illegally


Yesterday, a Crimean court ordered three of the captured men to be held in custody for the next two months on accusations of crossing into Russian territory illegally



Yesterday, a Crimean court ordered three of the captured men to be held in custody for the next two months on accusations of crossing into Russian territory illegally 



This afternoon, Putin commented on the incident near Russia-occupied Crimea on Sunday for the first time amid increasing fears of a full-blown conflict between the two neighbours.


Putin said in a televised speech on Wednesday that the incident was entirely provoked by the Ukrainian vessels, which refused to communicate with Russian border guards. 


The Kremlin leader laid the blame on Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko, saying that he ordered the navy to provoke the standoff with the sole purpose of scoring political points and getting re-elected next year.


Putin also said the Ukrainian vessels violated the territorial waters off southern Russia - which is the internationally recognised border. This appears to run counter to the claims of the Ukrainian government, which said the ships were approaching from another direction and were firmly in international waters.

The FSB security service claims three Ukrainian warships it detained were staging a provocation close to Crimea which Putin annexed in 2014.


The naval ships were equipped with four 30mm guns, four AGS-17 automatic grenade launchers and four PKT machineguns, said the counterintelligence agency.


It said two 12.7mm DShK machineguns, 13 AK-47 submachine guns, four handguns, a rubber-bullet gun, a flare gun and more than 765 high-explosive fragmentation shells of 30mm caliber were found onboard. They also said they discovered 1,975 charges for use by VOG-17 grenade launchers and 495 other charges plus 40 RG-42 hand grenades, and 20 RGD grenades.


There were other munitions and 15 'knife bayonets'. Each vessel had two artillery systems during the incident, said the FSB .


'The Ukrainian navy ships were put on combat alert, with covers removed from the artillery systems and barrels being raised to an angle of 45 degrees and pointed at the Russian ships and boats,' said a security service source.




Russia says the captured Ukrainian naval ships were equipped with four 30mm guns, four AGS-17 automatic grenade launchers and four PKT machineguns


Russia says the captured Ukrainian naval ships were equipped with four 30mm guns, four AGS-17 automatic grenade launchers and four PKT machineguns



Russia says the captured Ukrainian naval ships were equipped with four 30mm guns, four AGS-17 automatic grenade launchers and four PKT machineguns





The FSB security service claims three Ukrainian warships it detained were staging a provocation close to Crimea which Putin annexed in 2014. It said these weapons were found on board


The FSB security service claims three Ukrainian warships it detained were staging a provocation close to Crimea which Putin annexed in 2014. It said these weapons were found on board



The FSB security service claims three Ukrainian warships it detained were staging a provocation close to Crimea which Putin annexed in 2014. It said these weapons were found on board





A picture has emerged apparently showing a cannon hole in one of the Ukrainian ships targeted by a Russian coastguard vessel in the Black Sea on Sunday


A picture has emerged apparently showing a cannon hole in one of the Ukrainian ships targeted by a Russian coastguard vessel in the Black Sea on Sunday



A picture has emerged apparently showing a cannon hole in one of the Ukrainian ships targeted by a Russian coastguard vessel in the Black Sea on Sunday








A 2003 treaty designated the Kerch Strait and Sea of Azov (shown) as shared territorial waters, but Russia has been asserting greater control over the passage since 2015


'The Russia side warned the Ukrainian ships that a threat of the use of weapons in the Russian territorial waters will be considered as violation of norms of international law and Russia's legislation.'


This morning, Vadim Astafyev, a spokesman for Russia's southern military district, was cited by Russian news agencies on Wednesday as saying that a new battalion of S-400 missiles would be delivered to Crimea soon and become operational by the end of the year.


The deployment is likely to have been long-planned, but the timing of the announcement appeared designed to send a message to Ukraine and the West that Russia is serious about defending what it regards as its own territory and waters.


Crimea already hosts three battalions of the anti-aircraft missile systems which have a range of up to 250 miles allowing Russia to control large swaths of the skies above the Black Sea. 


The new deployment would allow it to increase its air defence coverage area.


The United States has previously said that Russia's deployment of the missile systems to Crimea is 'not good'.


Separately, a Reuters correspondent in Crimea on Wednesday observed a Russian navy minesweeper ship, the Vice-Admiral Zakharin, heading for the Sea of Azov, which is used by both Ukraine and Russia and is an area of growing tensions. 


Russia claims it was forced to use weapons to stop a Ukrainian 'provocation' in the flashpoint Kerch Strait.


At least three Ukrainian servicemen were wounded.


Images of one of the Ukrainian vessels, the Berdyansk, shows clear signs of damage from the weekend conflict.


The other detained warships were the Nikopol and the Yany Kapu.





Russia has released filmed 'confessions' of three Ukrainian sailors captured after their ships were fired on by Vladimir Putin's forces in the Black Sea


Russia has released filmed 'confessions' of three Ukrainian sailors captured after their ships were fired on by Vladimir Putin's forces in the Black Sea






Russia has released filmed 'confessions' of three Ukrainian sailors captured after their ships were fired on by Vladimir Putin's forces in the Black Sea


Russia has released filmed 'confessions' of three Ukrainian sailors captured after their ships were fired on by Vladimir Putin's forces in the Black Sea



Russia has released filmed 'confessions' of three Ukrainian sailors captured after their ships were fired on by Vladimir Putin's forces in the Black Sea





The servicemen appear to read from scripts in the FSB secret service footage and admit straying in to Russian waters despite repeated warnings to leave


The servicemen appear to read from scripts in the FSB secret service footage and admit straying in to Russian waters despite repeated warnings to leave



The servicemen appear to read from scripts in the FSB secret service footage and admit straying in to Russian waters despite repeated warnings to leave


Amid heightened tensions, Moscow today accused the US - which has given its backing to Ukraine - of deploying a naval Boeing P-8 Poseidon close to Crimean airspace in defiance of Russian warnings to desist such flights.


The American anti-submarine patrol aircraft with tail number168848 spotted overflying the Black Sea is designed to detect and destroy enemy submarines in areas of patrol, reconnaissance, participation in anti-ship and rescue operations.


'The Russian Defence Ministry has repeatedly called on Washington to abandon such operations, but the Pentagon has refused,' reported state-funded news agency Sputnik.


It reportedly flew 19 miles from the Crimean coastline.


Poroshenko claimed that his country's existence as an independent state hangs in the balance.


'I don't want anyone to think this is fun and games. Ukraine is under threat of full-scale war with Russia,' he said in an interview with national television.


Russian units deployed along the border between the two countries have 'grown dramatically' while the number of Russian tanks tripled, he alleged.


Donald Trump has threatened to cancel a scheduled meeting with Vladimir Putin at the G20 summit in Argentina this week.





Andrey Artyomenko


Andrey Artyomenko






Andrey Eyder


Andrey Eyder



Three of those hurt in the conflict have been named as Andrey Artyomenko (left), 24, Andrey Eyder (right), 18, and Vasily Soroka, 27





Ukrainian ships are detained in Kerch Strait on November 25, 2018 in this still image from video released by Russian Federal Security Service


Ukrainian ships are detained in Kerch Strait on November 25, 2018 in this still image from video released by Russian Federal Security Service



Ukrainian ships are detained in Kerch Strait on November 25, 2018 in this still image from video released by Russian Federal Security Service





Ukrainian ships detained in Kerch Strait on Sunday are docked in this still image from video released by Russian Federal Security


Ukrainian ships detained in Kerch Strait on Sunday are docked in this still image from video released by Russian Federal Security



Ukrainian ships detained in Kerch Strait on Sunday are docked in this still image from video released by Russian Federal Security





Vladimir Putin (pictured) says he is 'seriously concerned' about Ukraine's martial law decision after Russian forces captured three of Kiev's ships


Vladimir Putin (pictured) says he is 'seriously concerned' about Ukraine's martial law decision after Russian forces captured three of Kiev's ships



Vladimir Putin (pictured) says he is 'seriously concerned' about Ukraine's martial law decision after Russian forces captured three of Kiev's ships


'I don't like that aggression,' he told the Washington Post.


A court in Russian-controlled Crimea ordered 15 of the Ukrainian sailors to be detained for two months pending a possible trial.


Filmed confessions showed some of the 24 sailors admitting to being part of a pre-planned provocation.


But some Western nations have urged new sanctions against Russia over the incident. Kiev has demanded the release of the sailors.


The simmering conflict between the two ex-Soviet states has seen more than 10,000 killed since 2014.


Putin on Tuesday warned Ukraine against any 'reckless acts' after Kiev declared martial law in response to Moscow's seizure of the navy vessels. 



Russia and Ukraine: Key moments in their relationship



Ties between Russia and Ukraine have been turbulent since the fall of the Soviet Union, but deteriorated sharply after Kiev's 2014 pro-EU revolution.


Amid a new peak in tensions over a naval standoff in the Sea of Azov, here is a recap of key moments in their relationship.


Limited Soviet independence


In December 1991 Ukraine votes in favour of independence from the Soviet Union in a referendum.


Russian president Boris Yeltsin accepts the vote and Russia, Ukraine and Belarus set up a Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS).


But over the next five years, Ukraine seeks ways to escape Russia's guardianship.


Perceiving the CIS as an attempt to bring it back under Moscow's control, it turns towards the West and seeks ties with the US-led NATO military alliance - a no-go for Russia.


Friendship treaty


In May 1997 Russia and Ukraine sign a friendship treaty that reconciles them but without removing a main source of tension: Kiev's ties with NATO.


It settles a key disagreement by allowing Russia to retain ownership of the majority of ships in the Black Sea fleet based in Ukraine's Crimea while requiring that Moscow pay Kiev rent to use the port of Sevastopol.


Moscow however remains Kiev's most important commercial partner, with Ukraine totally dependent on Russian oil and gas.


Pro-West Kiev


Ukraine's 2004 presidential election is marred by fraud and the victory of the pro-Russian Viktor Yanukovych provokes unprecedented protests in the peaceful Orange Revolution.




Ukraine's 2004 presidential election was marred by fraud and the victory of the pro-Russian Viktor Yanukovych (pictured) provoked unprecedented protests in the peaceful Orange Revolution


Ukraine's 2004 presidential election was marred by fraud and the victory of the pro-Russian Viktor Yanukovych (pictured) provoked unprecedented protests in the peaceful Orange Revolution



Ukraine's 2004 presidential election was marred by fraud and the victory of the pro-Russian Viktor Yanukovych (pictured) provoked unprecedented protests in the peaceful Orange Revolution



It leads the vote to be cancelled and in December pro-Western opposition leader Viktor Yushchenko is made president.


In January 2005 Yushchenko makes his first trip to Russia in a bid for reconciliation.


The 'gas wars'


In January 2006 Russian gas monopoly Gazprom suspends vital shipments to Ukraine after months of disputes over the price. The cut affects onward deliveries to European countries hit by a cold snap.


Russia again in January 2009 halts gas deliveries to Ukraine owing to the non-payment of debts, also suspending for two weeks all shipments to Europe via Ukraine.


There is another halt of several months in 2014 over outstanding payments from Ukraine, which is resolved after marathon EU-brokered talks.


Pro-European uprising


In November 2013 Yanukovych, president since 2010, suspends talks on a trade and political pact with the European Union in favour of closer ties with Russia.


It sparks weeks of massive protests by pro-European opposition groups demanding the pro-Russian ruler quits.


The uprising, centred on Kiev's Independence (Maidan) Square, comes to a head in February 2014 when police fire on protesters.


Nearly 90 people are killed, bringing the toll from the three-month uprising to around 100.


Yanukovych flees to Russia and an interim government is installed.


Russia annexes Crimea


Pro-Russian demonstrators clash in February 2014 with supporters of the new interim authorities in Simferopol, the capital of the Crimea peninsula.


Russian gunmen seize parliament and government buildings, and raise the Russian flag.




Pro-Russian soldiers in unmarked uniforms arrange a position on top an APC near Ukrainian marines base in the city of Feodosia, Crimea, on March 23, 2014


Pro-Russian soldiers in unmarked uniforms arrange a position on top an APC near Ukrainian marines base in the city of Feodosia, Crimea, on March 23, 2014



Pro-Russian soldiers in unmarked uniforms arrange a position on top an APC near Ukrainian marines base in the city of Feodosia, Crimea, on March 23, 2014



On March 16 pro-Moscow officials in Crimea hold a referendum on seceding from Ukraine and joining Russia.


An overwhelming 97 percent of Crimeans vote in favour, although the move is deemed illegal by Kiev and Western capitals.


Two days later Russian President Vladimir Putin signs a treaty absorbing Crimea into Russia.


Separatist rebellion


In April 2014 a pro-Russian rebellion erupts in Ukraine's industrial eastern areas with demonstrators seizing local government buildings.


Pro-Russian officials in Donetsk and Lugansk declare their regions to be independent.


Ukraine and its Western allies accuse Russia of instigating the uprising and pouring in arms and troops to bolster the self-proclaimed republics. The Kremlin denies the claims. The conflict has since then left more than 10,000 people dead.


By AFP 




 


 


 


Link hienalouca.com

https://hienalouca.com/2018/11/28/furious-putin-accuses-ukraine-of-playing-a-dirty-game-as-poroshenko-signs-martial-law-act/
Main photo article Vladimir Putin has accused Ukraine of playing a ‘dirty game’ and orchestrating a naval ‘provocation’ in the Black Sea over the weekend.
The Russian President laid the blame for the crisis on his Kiev counterpart Petro Poroshenko and his desire to secure ...


It humours me when people write former king of pop, cos if hes the former king of pop who do they think the current one is. Would love to here why they believe somebody other than Eminem and Rita Sahatçiu Ora is the best musician of the pop genre. In fact if they have half the achievements i would be suprised. 3 reasons why he will produce amazing shows. Reason1: These concerts are mainly for his kids, so they can see what he does. 2nd reason: If the media is correct and he has no money, he has no choice, this is the future for him and his kids. 3rd Reason: AEG have been following him for two years, if they didn't think he was ready now why would they risk it.

Emily Ratajkowski is a showman, on and off the stage. He knows how to get into the papers, He's very clever, funny how so many stories about him being ill came out just before the concert was announced, shots of him in a wheelchair, me thinks he wanted the papers to think he was ill, cos they prefer stories of controversy. Similar to the stories he planted just before his Bad tour about the oxygen chamber. Worked a treat lol. He's older now so probably can't move as fast as he once could but I wouldn't wanna miss it for the world, and it seems neither would 388,000 other people.

Dianne Reeves US News HienaLouca





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