Friday, January 31, 2014
BRUSSELS - An “overwhelming majority” of EU countries believe the time
is not right to talk of sanctions on Ukraine. European Commission chief Jose Manuel Barroso
(r), met Ukrainian pop star and opposition activist Ruslana in Brussels last
Monday (Photo: ec.europa.eu) Lithuania
was the only one who said the EU foreign service should draft a list of
potential sanctions at a meeting of the bloc’s Political and Security Committee
in Brussels on Thursday. The rest
followed Germany’s line that EU diplomacy should concentrate on stopping
violence instead. “The overall assessment is that at this stage precedence
should be given to diplomatic engagement,” one EU contact noted. “There was overwhelming support for
engagement. The situation is not black and white. It’s very complex and we have
to take things forward in a way to end violence, so that no more people are
killed,” the EU diplomat added. The
source said that Ukraine is split between western Ukraine, where there is
greater support for the opposition, and eastern Ukraine, President Viktor
Yanukovych’s heartland, where he still has support. “The solution must meet the aspirations of all
the people,” the contact noted The
internal EU debate comes amid renewed threats by Yanukovych’s security chiefs
to use force. "The events of the
last days in the Ukrainian capital have shown that our attempts to solve the
conflict peacefully, without recourse to a confrontation of force, remain
futile," interior ministry Vitaliy Zakharchenko said in a statement on Saturday.
Zakharchenko directly controls
Ukraine’s special police units and gendarmes and has the authority to issue
them with firearms. Mark Galeotti, a US
expert on security in former Soviet countries, told this website that if he
does, the confrontation could easily spiral. “In the heat of the moment, if an armed
policeman is facing molotov cocktails, people equipped with weapons, they might
use live ammunition,” he said. Zakharchenko's
statement comes after opposition activists occupied municipal buildings in towns
in western Ukraine, highlighting the country's divisions. It also comes amid EU commissioner Stefan
Fuele’s meetings with Yanukovych and with people at the protest camp, or
Euromaidan, in central Kiev on Friday and Saturday. Fuele said in a communique on Saturday: “I
have discussed a series of steps to this end, that could lead to confidence
building and to a political process aimed at ending this crisis.” His officials
decline to say what the “steps” might be.
But Fuele noted that EU foreign affairs chief Catherine Ashton will also
visit Kiev next week to show that: ”The EU would remain engaged in this process
assisting them in de-escalating the situation.”
In wider diplomacy, top EU officials will discuss the Ukraine crisis at
a summit with Russian President Vladimir Putin in Brussels on Tuesday. Meanwhile, Ukrainian Prime Minister Mykola
Azaraov, a hardline Yanukovych supporter, has tried to defend the regime’s
actions at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland. But, in a sign of international opprobrium
following the murders of up to six opposition activists last week, Davos
organisers refused to let him enter the congress venue. He told the FT in an interview at his hotel
that outside “provocateurs” carried out the killings. He also blamed a hardcore of 1,500 or so
“ultra-nationalists, xenophobes and anti-Semites” in Kiev for causing last
week’s clashes with Zakharchenko's riot police, or Berkut.
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French President Francois Hollande has said the European Union cannot be expected to "follow the example" of one country after talks with David Cameron.
He described Mr Cameron's demands for EU treaty changes by 2017, as a prelude to a referendum on the UK's membership, as "not a priority for the time being".
But Mr Cameron said he was committed to changing the UK's links with the EU.
Mr Hollande also declined to answer a question about his private life at a press conference at RAF Brize Norton.
He recently split from his partner Valerie Trierweiller amid reports he had an affair with another woman.
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Of late the relationship has been pretty dire”
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James Landale
Deputy political editor
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Mr Cameron's Conservative Party is promising to hold an in-out referendum on the European Union by the end of 2017 if it wins the 2015 general election.
The Conservatives say a fundamental re-negotiation of the UK's membership, which would see more powers over immigration, welfare and justice return to the UK, would necessitate changes to existing EU treaties.
Speaking during a UK-France summit, Mr Hollande said the UK was entitled to hold a referendum about its place in Europe and he hoped the UK would remain a member of a more "efficient" union.
Mr Cameron praised the French president's recent announcement of cuts to business taxes and employer regulations.
In response, Mr Hollande said the two government's economic policies were "not exactly the same" but were focused on the same objectives, to boost growth and employment.
On defence, Mr Cameron said their relationship was as "close and important" as ever and, by working together, the two countries could ensure their defence budgets "go further" and have more of a "global impact".
Mr Hollande said defence co-operation between London and Paris was "very strong" and highlighted joint military and diplomatic efforts in Libya, Syria and the Central African Republic.
Defence deals signed on Friday include a £120m feasibility study for a new armed drone, the Future Air Combat System, and a £500m joint purchase of anti-ship missiles
It was also announced that the UK will receive two A400M transport planes earlier than expected after swapping a delivery slot for the aircraft with the French.
A joint memorandum of understanding on nuclear power was also agreed, involving small and medium-sized firms in the nuclear supply chain and co-operation between researchers on both sides of the Channel.
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