(Kyiv) Russia is set to formally annex areas of Ukraine where it exercises military control, after referendums apparently endorsed Moscow’s rule.
Posted at 8:55 a.m.
But the polls were widely discredited and earned the Kremlin no relief on Wednesday from international pressure in the wake of its assault on its neighbour.
Pro-Moscow administrations in the four occupied regions of southern and eastern Ukraine said on Tuesday evening that their residents had voted to join Russia in a five-day Kremlin-orchestrated poll.
According to electoral officials based in Russia, 93% of the votes cast in the Zaporizhia region were in favor of annexation, as were 87% in the Kherson region, 98% in the Luhansk region and 99% in Donetsk.
Russian officials in those occupied areas said Wednesday they would ask President Vladimir Putin to integrate them into Russia. It was not immediately clear how the administrative process would unfold.
Western countries, however, dismissed the polls as a meaningless pretext staged by Moscow in an attempt to legitimize its February 24 invasion of Ukraine.
US Ambassador to the United Nations Linda Thomas-Greenfield said Tuesday night that Washington would propose a UN Security Council resolution to condemn Russia’s “fictitious” vote.
The resolution would also urge member states not to recognize any altered status of Ukraine and demand that Russia withdraw its troops from its neighbour, it added on Twitter.
European Union foreign policy chief Josep Borrell also denounced the ballots, calling them “illegal” on Wednesday and describing the results as “tampered with”.
“This is yet another violation of Ukraine’s sovereignty (and) territorial integrity, (amidst) systematic human rights abuses,” Borrell tweeted.
In Kyiv, Ukraine’s Foreign Ministry called the ballots a “propaganda spectacle” and “void and worthless”.
“Forcing residents of these territories to fill out papers under the barrel of a gun is another Russian crime during its aggression against Ukraine,” a Foreign Ministry statement said.
He called on the EU, NATO and the Group of Seven major industrial nations to “immediately and significantly” step up pressure on Russia through new sanctions and to dramatically increase their military aid to the EU. Ukraine.
The Kremlin, however, remained impassive in the face of the rain of criticism. His spokesman, Dmitry Peskov, said that at the very least Russia intended to drive Ukrainian forces out of the eastern region of Donetsk, where Moscow troops and separatist forces currently control around 60% of the territory. .
The EU also expressed outrage over Tuesday’s alleged sabotage of two undersea natural gas pipelines linking Russia to Germany and warned of retaliation for any attacks on European energy networks.
Mr. Borrell said on Wednesday that “all available information indicates that these leaks were the result of a deliberate act”, although the perpetrators have not yet been identified.
“Any deliberate disruption of Europe’s energy infrastructure is completely unacceptable and will be met with a strong and united response,” Borrell warned in a statement on behalf of the 27 EU member countries.
Mr Peskov, the Kremlin spokesman, said allegations that Russia could be behind the incidents were “predictable and stupid”. He told reporters on a conference call that the damage had caused huge economic losses to Russia.
The war in Ukraine has caused an energy stalemate between the EU, many of whose members have depended on Russian natural gas supplies for years, and Moscow.
The damage makes it unlikely the pipelines will be able to deliver gas to Europe this winter, analysts say.
Meanwhile, Ukraine’s military and a Washington-based think tank said Wednesday that Russia was sending troops without any training to the frontline.
Moscow has struggled to hold the line in the face of Ukraine’s recent counter-offensive and has ordered a partial mobilization to replenish its ranks. The effort, however, causes unrest, amidst a reluctant audience.
In a daily briefing, the Ukrainian Army General Staff said that the 1er tank regiment of the 2e motorized rifle division of the 1D Russian tank army had received new untrained troops.
The Ukrainian military also reported that convicts were arriving in Ukraine to reinforce Russian lines. She provided no evidence to support this claim, although Ukrainian security services released audio recordings of allegedly monitored Russian phone conversations on the matter.
A think tank, the Institute for the Study of War, cited an online video of a man who identified himself as a member of the 1er tank regiment, visibly upset, saying he and his colleagues would not receive training until they were shipped to Russian-occupied territories.
“Mobilized men with a day or two of training are unlikely to significantly reinforce Russian positions affected by Ukrainian counter-offensives in the south and east,” the institute said.
Britain’s Ministry of Defense said Ukraine’s counter-offensive, which inflicted humiliating defeats on Moscow’s forces, is progressing slowly.
He added that Russia is now building a stronger defense.
In the eastern Ukrainian region of Donetsk, partially occupied by Moscow, Russian fire has killed five people and injured 10 others in the past 24 hours, revealed Pavlo Kyrylenko, the head of the local military authority.
Authorities in the southern Ukrainian town of Nikopol said Russian rockets and artillery pounded the town overnight.
The city, across the Dnipro River from Russian-occupied territory, saw 10 skyscrapers and private buildings hit, along with a school, power lines and other areas, according to Valentyn Reznichenko, the head of the local military administration.