Russia fires on Ukraine’s navy near Crimea as tensions flare

Bloomberg

Russia fired on Ukrainian warships and injured some of their crew members, marking a dramatic renewal of tensions between the ex-Soviet neighbours near the peninsula of Crimea that President Vladimir Putin annexed four years ago.
Ukraine said Russian warships opened fire on Sunday on a group of its military vessels in neutral waters that had previously tried to enter the Kerch Strait. Six men were wounded as Russia “fired to kill,” while three ships were captured, according to Ukraine’s Navy.
Parliament was expected to hold an emergency session on Monday in Kiev to discuss whether to impose martial law. The United Nations Security Council was expected to hold an emergency meeting on Monday in New York to discuss the situation, US envoy Nikki Haley said.
Russia said it used all necessary measures to stop Ukrainian vessels that had violated its waters and engaged in “dangerous maneuvers.” It had earlier cut off access to the strait “for security reasons.”
Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko contacted the European Union and NATO about possible additional sanctions over what he called “criminal acts.” He stressed that martial law — a measure that wasn’t even taken at the height of Ukraine’s hostilities with Russia — would not mean military mobilisation or war.
Sunday’s incident is one of the worst flare-ups since a 2015 truce to halt violence in the Russian-backed conflict in Ukraine’s easternmost regions and comes less than a week before a Group of 20 leaders’ summit in Buenos Aires.
Tensions between the two neighbours have contributed to ties between Russia and the West plummeting to the worst since the Cold War.
Facing a re-election bid next year, Poroshenko can’t afford to appear weak, even though his navy is far smaller than Russia’s. At the same time, Ukraine’s supporters in the West have little enthusiasm for a new escalation of the conflict that broke out after protesters ousted the country’s Kremlin-backed leader and demanded closer ties with the EU.
“We expect Russia to restore freedom of passage at the Kerch strait and urge all to act with utmost restraint to deescalate the situation immediately,” an EU spokesman said.
NATO said separately that it’s closely monitoring developments.
Russia’s construction of a bridge across the Kerch Strait — the entrance to the Azov Sea — limited ship traffic to the Ukrainian port of Mariupol, an important freight hub. Russia’s FSB security service said the three Ukrainian ships had been “detained” for violating the Russian border. It said the wounded sailors were treated and their injuries aren’t life threatening.
Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova called the events a “provocation,” accusing Ukraine of setting it all up to accuse Russia of aggression. Ukraine says it warned Russia in advance of the passage of its vessels.
The Atlantic Council, a Washington-based think tank, said Russia was probably to blame for the flare-up.

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