Monday, 8 September 2014

EU Slows New Russia Sanctions as It Gauges Ukraine Truce

Photographer: Simon Dawson/Bloomberg
“The entry into force through the publication in the Official Journal will take place... Read More
European Union governments abruptly put on hold for at least a “few days” new sanctions against Russia, allowing more time to assess the viability of a cease-fire in Ukraine without risking further trade retaliation by the Kremlin.
The EU’s second package of economic penalties against Russia was delayed late yesterday in Brussels by the bloc’s 28 governments, which approved the measures in principle while stopping short of giving the green light for their publication in the Official Journal and entry into force.
The planned provisions -- originally due to be
published today -- include barring some Russian state-owned defense and energy companies from raising capital in the EU, according to a European official who spoke on the usual condition of anonymity.
A Sept. 5 cease-fire between the Ukrainian government and pro-Russian separatists has raised the prospect of a lasting truce that would be the biggest breakthrough yet to end a conflict that has killed at least 3,000 people and soured Russia’s relations with its former Cold War foes.
“The entry into force through the publication in the Official Journal will take place in the next few days,” EU President Herman Van Rompuy said in a statement late yesterday. “This will leave time for an assessment of the implementation of the cease-fire agreement and the peace plan. Depending on the situation on the ground, the EU stands ready to review the agreed sanctions in whole or in part.”
Photographer: Philippe Desmazes/AFP/Getty Images
A Ukrainian army vehicle drives as pro-Russian separatists fire heavy artillery, on the... Read More

Eastern Ukraine

The agreement to halt fighting came in the midst of an EU push to ratchet up penalties against Russia in coordination with the U.S. in a bid to force Russian President Vladimir Putin to end support for the rebels in eastern Ukraine. Putin’s backing of Ukrainian separatists and his annexation of Crimea have jolted the security order in Europe.
Finnish Prime Minister Alexander Stubb told reporters yesterday in Helsinki that he’s “very worried” about the possibility of Russian counter-sanctions should the EU enact the new package. At the same time, “we are strongly of the opinion that the cease-fire has so far not been permanent,” Stubb said.
In a sign the cease-fire accord was shaky yesterday, Ukraine said pro-Russian rebels targeted Mariupol, a frontline city in the east of the country, after Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko announced a visit there.

Port City

Road blocks near the port city on the Sea of Azov came under fire from militants yesterday, presidential spokesman Svyatoslav Tsegolko said on Twitter. Shelling and small-arms fire continued during the previous 24 hours across the war-torn eastern regions of Luhansk and Donetsk, said Andriy Lysenko, a spokesman for Ukraine’s National Security and Defense Council.
“I am not optimistic at all -- I have not been optimistic from the beginning,” Didier Burkhalter, chairman of the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe, which helped mediate and is monitoring the cease-fire, said at a news conference in Geneva. Even so, “we want to give it a chance.”
In an initial set of economic sanctions imposed in late July, the EU barred five state-owned Russian banks from selling shares or bonds in Europe; restricted the export of equipment to modernize the oil industry; prohibited new contracts to sell arms to Russia; and banned the export of machinery, electronics and other civilian products with military uses -- so-called dual-use goods -- to military users.

Farm Goods

Those measures prompted Russia to ban imports of some EU farm goods, a step that has cut off about 5 billion euros ($6.5 billion) of annual trade and left the bloc scrambling to aid its producers. In a statement on Sept. 6, the day after EU member-state diplomats drew up the latest sanctions plan, the Russian government signaled it would take further retaliatory action should the extra penalties be enacted.
“In the case that they are introduced, a reaction from our side will undoubtedly follow,” the Foreign Ministry said in a statement in Moscow.
EU sanctions decisions require the support of all EU governments, giving any one leverage to seek concessions. Several European leaders including Stubb and his Hungarian counterpart, Viktor Orban, have expressed concerns about the impact of penalties against Russia on the EU economy.
The delayed EU package would extend to three energy companies -- OAO Gazprom Neft (SIBN), OAO Rosneft and OAO Transneft -- as well as to nine defense companies the ban on share or bond sales in the EU, according to the European official who spoke anonymously.

Russian Businesses

It would also shorten to 30 days from 90 days the threshold for the maturity of debt whose sale in the bloc by the targeted Russian businesses is banned; prohibit European banks from offering syndicated loans to sanctioned Russian companies; expand the restrictions on dual-use goods and widen the curbs on technologies for the oil industry, according to the official.
In a sign of the political sensitivities of applying the tougher measures, EU diplomats met on short notice yesterday evening in Brussels to discuss the package they had approved three days earlier.
An additional outcome last night was that the EU put on hold a parallel plan to expand a blacklist of people and companies subject to asset freezes in Europe in connection with the Ukrainian crisis. EU leaders on Aug. 30, beyond calling for more economic penalties against Russia to be prepared, asked for proposals to blacklist people and institutions “dealing with” separatist groups in the Donbass region of eastern Ukraine.

EU Diplomats

The latest people that would be targeted include the new leadership in Donbass, the government of Crimea and “Russian decision-makers and oligarchs,” Van Rompuy said in a Sept. 5 statement after the EU diplomats had approved the new measures and sent them to the bloc’s national governments for final approval yesterday.
The new blacklist would add 24 people, including two additional Kremlin “cronies,” according to a second European official who spoke on the usual condition of anonymity.
Like the tougher economic penalties, the latest blacklist targets had been due to be disclosed today in the Official Journal. The economic penalties would normally take effect the day after publication, while the blacklist decisions would enter into force the same day.

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