Archive for the ‘Ukraine’ Category

Ukraine to Seek Order Ensuring Russian Gas During Arbitration

Ukraine will ask a Stockholm court to require Russia to continue natural-gas supplies during arbitration as a June payment deadline looms.

Talks between Moscow and Kiev on the gas price have stalled and can only be resolved in arbitration that may start after May 28, Finance Minister Oleksandr Shlapak said in an interview in Brussels. OAO Gazprom, Russias natural-gas exporter, sent Ukraine a bill yesterday for an estimated $1.7 billion of gas the country may import next month, saying it will cut off supplies if no money is received by June 2.

Well insist both sides must fulfill their obligations in good faith, as a precautionary measure, Shlapak said of the arbitration case Ukraine is filing. We will ship gas to Europe as set out in the transit contract. If you please, deliver gas to Ukraine and dont break the contract. This is how well ask the arbitration court to approach the issue.

Ukraine depends on Russia for about half its gas and carries about 15 percent of the European Unions annual use of the fuel through its pipeline network, and a cutoff could disrupt shipments to the EU.

The situation has reached a dead end from the point of view of negotiations, Shlapak said in the interview late yesterday. He rejected the gas price Russia has demanded since April, saying the increase was politically motivated.

Finance Minister Oleksandr Shlapak said, Well insist both sides must fulfill their obligations in good faith, as a precautionary measure. Close

Finance Minister Oleksandr Shlapak said, Well insist both sides must fulfill their... Read More

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Finance Minister Oleksandr Shlapak said, Well insist both sides must fulfill their obligations in good faith, as a precautionary measure.

Arbitration is necessary as because the government in Kiev refuses to make prepayments at the higher price, while Russia says it will not discuss a lower price until a debt for previous supplies is paid off, Shlapak said.

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Ukraine to Seek Order Ensuring Russian Gas During Arbitration

Ukraine Slides Deeper Toward War as Russia Warns on Vote

May 14 (Bloomberg) -- Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov discusses the conflict in Ukraine with Bloomberg's Ryan Chilcote at the Foreign Ministry building in central Moscow.(Source: Bloomberg)

Ukraine is as close to civil war as you can get, and a solution to the crisis must satisfy its regions, Russia said, after eastern rebels ambushed a Ukrainian army convoy in the deadliest blow in their campaign to secede.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said there is a real war in eastern and southern Ukraine, where more than 30 attackers struck a convoy yesterday near the city of Kramatorsk, killing at least six paratroopers. Having accused Russia of supporting separatists with its special forces and saboteurs, Ukrainian acting Defense Minister Mykhaylo Koval said the two countries were embroiled in an undeclared war.

The ambush was the rebels deadliest attack against Ukraines military since they began a campaign to secede after Russia annexed Crimea in March. The battle came after separatists in Luhansk and Donetsk agreed to join forces to confront the central government. Casualties included quite a number of self-defense fighters killed by artillery and mortars, which may complicate a May 25 presidential election.

When Ukrainians kill Ukrainians, I believe its as close to civil war as you can get, Lavrov told Bloomberg Television in an interview in Moscow. In the east and south of Ukraine, there is a war, a real war, with heavy weaponry used, and if this is something that is conducive to free and fair elections, then I dont understand something about freedom.

The North Atlantic Treaty Organization accuses Russian President Vladimir Putin of supporting the insurgents. It says his government has failed to make good on a pledge to move about 40,000 troops back from the frontier with Ukraine, a country of 45 million people bordering European Union and NATO member states Poland, Slovakia, Hungary and Romania.

We are confronted with an unprecedented situation, which is challenging not only the post-war order, but also our security and peace in our region, Slovak Foreign Minister Miroslav Lajcak told reporters at a global security conference in Bratislava today.

Ukrainian Prime Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk urged Russia yesterday to condemn the insurgent groups and do all it can to stabilize the situation. The crisis has fueled the worst standoff between Russia and its Cold War foes since the fall of the Iron Curtain, with the U.S. and EU slapping sanctions on companies and people in Putins inner circle.

The escalation ended a five-day rally in Russian stocks. The Micex Index (INDEXCF) slid 0.1 percent to 1,383.98 at 4:41 p.m. in Moscow. The ruble strengthened 0.3 percent to 34.7426 per dollar, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Ukraines hryvnia was 0.8 percent weaker to the dollar, bringing its loss to 31 percent since the start of the year.

The violence in Ukraine is building into regular warfare between militia and the Ukrainian armed forces, and that means the threat of civil war is growing, Dmitry Orlov, director general of the Agency for Political and Economic Communications in Moscow, said by phone today.

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Ukraine Slides Deeper Toward War as Russia Warns on Vote

Ukraine Gas Producer Appoints R. Hunter Biden to Board

By Javier E. David

Ukraine's largest private gas producer announced on Tuesday that it added R. Hunter Biden the son of U.S. Vice President Joseph Biden to its board of directors.

In a statement on its website, Burisma Holdings said the younger Biden will be in charge of the company's legal unit, while providing support "among international organizations."

The release quoted Hunter Biden as saying that "my assistance in consulting the Company on matters of transparency, corporate governance and responsibility, international expansion and other priorities will contribute to the economy and benefit the people of Ukraine."

Vice-President Joe Biden and his son Hunter Biden walk in the Inaugural Parade January 20, 2009 in Washington, DC as Barack Obama was sworn in as the 44th President of the United States.

Large corporations frequently appoint well-connected marquee names of both major U.S. political parties as directors. Yet corporate governance experts are critical of the process, which can be fraught with conflicts of interests and the appearance of favoritism.

The arrangement raised questions about the propriety of his appointment, given the tense political standoff between Russia and the West over the future status of Ukraine, where fighting has resulted in the deaths of dozens of soldiers and civilians. Natural gas has factored heavily in tensions between Russia and Ukraine, both of which have political leadership that's intertwined with their respective energy industries.

Until a few years ago, the younger Biden was a senior vice president for financial services giant MBNAan arrangement that drew criticism during the 2008 elections for potential conflict of interests. As a senator, the elder Biden spearheaded legislation that would have affected MBNA's business. Meanwhile, Vice President Biden has been a vocal supporter of a cross-border European natural gas pipeline.

Earlier Tuesday, White House spokesman Jay Carney referred questions on the appointment to the vice president's office.

In response to an inquiry from CNBC, a spokesperson for the vice president said, "Hunter Biden is a private citizen and a lawyer. The vice president does not endorse any particular company and has no involvement with this company."

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Ukraine Gas Producer Appoints R. Hunter Biden to Board

Ukraine Agrees To Talks _ But Its Foes Are Missing

KIEV, Ukraine (AP) The Ukrainian government launched talks Wednesday on decentralizing power as part of a European-backed peace plan but did not invite its main foes, the pro-Russia insurgents who have declared independence in the east.

That deliberate oversight left it unclear what the negotiations might accomplish.

In his opening remarks, acting President Oleksandr Turchynov said authorities were "ready for a dialogue" but insisted they will not talk to the separatists who have seized buildings and fought government troops across eastern Ukraine.

Turchynov chaired the first in a series of round tables with spiritual leaders, lawmakers, government figures and regional officials as part of a peace plan drafted by the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe, a security group that also includes Russia and the United States.

"Let's have a dialogue, let's discuss specific proposals," Turchynov said, "But those armed people who are trying to wage a war on their own country, those who are with arms in their hands trying to dictate their will, or rather the will of another country, we will use legal procedures against them and they will face justice."

The OSCE road map aims to halt fighting between government forces and pro-Russia separatists in the east and de-escalate tensions ahead of Ukraine's May 25 presidential vote. It lets the Ukrainian government decide the specifics of the talks.

The Ukrainian leader also said the government would not stop its offensive to retake eastern cities now under the control of the separatists who declared independence Monday in the Luhansk and Donetsk regions, home to 6.6 million people.

Insurgents in the east shrugged off the round table as meaningless.

"We haven't received any offers to join a round table and dialogue," Denis Pushilin, an insurgent leader in Donetsk. "If the authorities in Kiev want a dialogue, they must come here. If we go to Kiev, they will arrest us."

Even so, European officials applauded the start of the talks. The EU's enlargement commissioner, Stefan Fule, welcomed the round table on his Twitter account, voicing hope the next meeting would take place in eastern Ukraine.

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Ukraine Agrees To Talks _ But Its Foes Are Missing

Insider: "Ukraine Is A $15 Billion Dollar Dead Asset" – Video


Insider: "Ukraine Is A $15 Billion Dollar Dead Asset"
Alex and Dr. Steve Pieczenik break down the complete corruption inside our standing government and military as scandals come out of the woodwork linking the CIA to benghazi, the ukraine and...

By: THElNFOWARRlOR

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Insider: "Ukraine Is A $15 Billion Dollar Dead Asset" - Video