Archive for the ‘Ukraine’ Category

Ukraine: Activists ‘Disappeared’ in Separatist Territory | Human … – Human Rights Watch

(Kyiv) Russianlesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) activist and another person have been missing since January 31, 2017, in the separatist-controlled area of the Donetsk region in easternUkraine, and are feared to be victims of enforced disappearances, Human Rights Watch said today. Human Rights Watch is concerned that the de facto authorities of the self-proclaimed Donetsk Peoples Republic (DNR) have detained them and are refusing to acknowledge their detention.

Grey Violet, a Russian transgender person (also known as Oleg Vasilyev and Maria Shtern), and Victoria Miroshnichenko arrived in the DNR on January 31. They had planned to stage a public performance in Donetsk in support of the LGBT community and record it on video.

It is distressing that no one has been able to find out where Grey Violet and Miroshnichenko are since they arrived in the DNR 10 days ago, saidTanya Cooper, Ukraine researcher at Human Rights Watch. Their sudden disappearance requires prompt and effective investigation.

Grey Violet, LGBT activist feared disappeared in eastern Ukraine. Facebook.

One of the activists friends in Kyiv told Human Rights Watch that Grey Violet was last in contact with her at about 11 a.m. on January 31. Other friends confirmed that it was the last day any of them had heard from Grey Violet and that the activist had stopped answering phone and online messages.

The friends said they received information that Grey Violet and Miroshnichenko were detained shortly after their arrival in the region, presumably by DNR security officials. A Russian mediareportmentioned that one of Grey Violets friends reached out to the DNR authorities to inquire about the activists whereabouts, but that an assistant to the DNR peoples council chairman said that neither the security services nor the police were holding them.

Human Rights Watch has not been able to get information about why the activists may have been detained, or whether they face any charges.

A 2016 report by Anti-Discrimination Center Memorial, a Russian rights group based in Saint Petersburg, says that the situation for the LGBT community in the separatist-held Luhansk and Donetsk regions hasdrastically deterioratedsince the beginning of the armed conflict in eastern Ukraine in 2014. In September 2014, the de facto authorities of the separatist-held Luhansk region said they were considering a death sentence for homosexuality.

Human Rights Watch research found thatlocal security servicesin both separatist-held regions operate withoutany adherence to the rule of law, and are not subject to checks and balances. Anyone they detain is fully at their mercy, and the victims relatives have no one to turn to.

If Grey Violet and Miroshnichenko are in custody, the de facto DNR authorities should immediately reveal their whereabouts, Human Rights Watch said.

The longer Grey Violet and Miroshnichenko are held without revealing their whereabouts, the more they are vulnerable to abuse, Cooper said. The de facto DNR authorities should immediately find out where they are and ensure their safety. If there are lawful grounds for holding them, guarantee their due process rights, including unimpeded access to legal counsel of their choice.

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Ukraine: Activists 'Disappeared' in Separatist Territory | Human ... - Human Rights Watch

The Case For Arming Ukraine So It Can Stand Up To Russia – Jalopnik

Ukrainian government soldiers take a breather in eastern Ukraine during a lull in the fighting in 2014. Photo credit: AP

For more than two years, Ukrainehas been outgunned battling Russian-backed rebels and Russian soldiersin the countrys east. Given that peace agreements have failed to end the conflict and Russia consistently lies about not helping rebels fight Ukrainian forces, should America give lethal weaponsspecifically Javelin anti-tank missilesto Kyiv?

Arming countries is not a bad thing if it allows them to protect themselves against destabilizing forces. If Russia steamrolls Ukraine, there is nothing in Putins history to suggest that he would not continue onward because he feel no one will care. And international law fully justifies a country protecting itself. Sending lethal weapons to Ukraine would simply be supporting a sovereign nation to defend itself.

And if you do not believe Europe is Americas business, keep in mind the NATO strikes against Serbia in 1999. The premise was that an unstable Kosovo and an ongoing conflict in the heart of Europe posed a national security risk for the west. A similar argument could be made for Ukraine, a much bigger nation situated on NATOs border. Allowing chaos to fester is not smart policy. It is simply weak and shortsighted.

Sending weapons to Ukraine is not a declaration of war against Russia. It is a commitment to Kyivs independence.

And there is also some hypocrisy with Putin pushing back against arming the rebels. When he launched a brutal offensive against rebels in Chechnya in the early 2000s, he said he did so to defend Russia against terrorism. Why, then, cant Ukraine defend itself from people they consider terrorists? Given that much of the fighting taking place in eastern Ukraine borders Russia, one would think Putin would want to end the conflict.

Unless, of course, he believes he is benefitting somehow from seeing the violence in Ukraine continue indefinitely.

Theres already been a lot of talk about the possibility, and as Senator John McCain pointed out to Trump, he has the authority as President to provide lethal weapons to Ukraine via the National Defense Authorization Act, which stipulates that the president can send upwards $350 million in military aid to Ukraine.

During a recent visit to Kyiv, a former general in the Ukrainian army and a deputy minister in charge of bring peace to the conflict region both told me that their armed forces would benefit tremendously from having lethal weapons, particularly Javelin anti-tank missiles. They are particularly appealing in mid-range combat situations because they are very portable, lightweight and use infrared guidance to take out a target and allow the troops that fired it to take cover immediately.

The Estonians were especially pleased to get their FGM-148 Javelins this year:

One advantage of Ukrainian soldiers having the Javelin is that it would allow them to fire from 1.5 miles, which would allow some distance between themselves and the target. Reuben Johnson of Janes Defence told the BBC that Ukrainian troops are being overwhelmed because they lack the proper anti-tank hardware to fight the rebels:

The Russian equipment in eastern Ukraine is some of the best they have. About 70 percent of Ukrainian anti-tank missiles are old or even expired. But almost all the Russian armor is reactive - that means boxes of explosives cover the tank, so when a missile hits a box it blows up the missile without harming the tank.

The call for providing Ukraine lethal weapons has had support from both sides of the aisle since the war started in 2014. Former President Barack Obama resisted sending Ukraine lethal aid due to fears it would provoke Russia to further stir up even more trouble.

But the reality is that the conflict is getting worse, even though no weapons have been sent.

Trump is still accused of being in a weird bromance with Russian President Vladimir Putin, but he is so unpredictable that it is difficult to gauge, exactly, how his outlook will change over time. Between his envoy to the U.N. Nikki Haley saying sanctions will continue, and his assurance to Ukrainian opposition leader Yulia Tymoshenko of the same, Trump seems to be sending indirect signals that his White Houses stance on Putin is becoming toughereven if it is not a direct condemnation of the Kremlin.

Russia, on the other hand, has been sending its hardware to rebels to battle government forces since the conflict started. A rebel commander told The Telegraph in 2015 that Russian tanks were crucial in winning key battles that year. And U.S. General Curtis Scaparrotti, head of the European Command, said during a Senate Armed Services Committee hearing last year that he supports sending Ukraine Javelins, but added that I believe that we should provide the weaponry that we believe they need to defend their sovereignty, and that they are capable of using.

If the concern is that Ukraine has not proven themselves to be a modern military, the next bet is to develop a Train and Equip program for Ukraine like the one the U.S. Army organized for the Georgian military in the early 2000s. The training provided Georgian troops with advanced weapons, surveillance and border patrol training.

The caveat for that relationship was that soldiers were often deployed to Iraq after their training, which is pretty much the opposite of what the stated intent was of the program. But, given that Ukraine has an active war in its own back yard, the program could be adjusted to simply train to protect their country instead of having to train under the guise of fighting global terror.

Of course, there are some disadvantages of following through with arming Kyiv. It pretty much comes down to whether the White House believes providing Ukraine lethal weapons would push the Kremlin to escalate the conflict even further. Harvard international relations professor Stephen M. Walt argued as much in Foreign Policy, saying that providing lethal weapons to Kyiv would only add to Russias insecurity:

... arming Ukraine will only make things worse. It certainly will not enable Ukraine to defeat the far stronger Russian army; it will simply intensify the conflict and add to the suffering of the Ukrainian people.

Nor is arming Ukraine likely to convince Putin to cave in and give Washington what it wants. Ukraine is historically linked to Russia, they are right next door to each other, Russian intelligence has long-standing links inside Ukraines own security institutions, and Russia is far stronger militarily. Even massive arms shipments from the United States wont tip the balance in Kievs favor, and Moscow can always escalate if the fighting turns against the rebels, as it did last summer.

Most importantly, Ukraines fate is much more important to Moscow than it is to us, which means that Putin and Russia will be willing to pay a bigger price to achieve their aims than we will.

The argument is legitimate, but the only issue is that Washington and most of the NATO alliance has been trying to appease Putin for more than a decade to no avail. Whether it is the Baltic States, Romania, Poland, or any other post-communist state that is now a NATO member, they are in the alliance because they fear Russia and choose Brussels over Moscow. Putins insecurity is very real, however the west cannot burden itself with a man who refuses to realize that most of his neighbors do not want to be chained to his sphere of influence.

Moreover, one of Putins primary geopolitical tools is to create problems in conflict zones in former soviet states that want to leave his political orbit and freeze them. This is the case for South Ossetia and Abkhazia in Georgia, Transnistria in Moldova and currently Donbass in Ukraine. If the conflict in eastern Ukraine ends up like Georgia and Moldova, Putin will permanently host instability near NATOs borders.

And if Ukraine is beaten into a permanent state of near-collapse, then the world will need to start worrying about Putins next play. Maybe the Baltics.

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The Case For Arming Ukraine So It Can Stand Up To Russia - Jalopnik

Kiev Is Fueling the War in Eastern Ukraine, Too – Foreign Policy (blog)

KIEV, Ukraine Less than two weeks after President Donald Trumps inauguration, full-blown war returned to eastern Ukraine.

Beginning Jan. 29, rockets rained down on residential and military positions along the front line, killing civilians and soldiers alike. One 60-year-old woman was killed in separatist shelling as she walked from her home to a nearby market; a 24-year-old medic was killed when a shell exploded next to the ambulance she was driving. The fighting decimated local water and electricity infrastructure, spawning a renewed humanitarian crisis in the region that could affect hundreds of thousands of people as temperatures dip below 0 degrees Fahrenheit.

It stands to reason that the return to fighting in eastern Ukraine bears some relationship to the political event that preceded it by nine days the inauguration of Trump as U.S. president. But the influence of Trumps election on the calculus of war and peace in Donbass cuts both ways. Its not just Russian aggression that theTrump presidency has stirred up, analysts say. Kiev, too, has becomeless inclined to compromise as it has grown more uncertain about Washingtons policy toward the conflict.

Until this past week, large-scale fighting had for the most part died down in Donbass since the signing of the Minsk II cease-fire agreement in February 2015. Front-line areas still saw exchanges between government forces and Russian-backed separatists, but nothing that resembled a significant battle.

That changed on Jan. 29, when fighting broke out in the town of Avdiivka. Nearly two dozen civilians and soldiers have died, and many more have been injured in what the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) describes as the heaviest shelling it has recorded since the war began in 2014. Now, one week on, Ukrainian forces have solidified their defenses and moved forward the sort of heavy weaponry, including battle tanks, that was supposed to be removed from the front lines as part of the Minsk II Agreement.

Kiev has pointed the finger at Russia as the culprit for the recent outbreak of fighting, and there is some evidence to support its case. Three days before the fighting erupted, Olexander Motuzyanyk, a spokesman for Ukraines Ministry of Defense, warned of a Russian military buildup along the Ukrainian border in Russias Rostov region; the next day, Russia alerted the OSCEs Permanent Council about the increased risk of an escalation of the conflict in Donbass. Still, unlike in previous large-scale confrontations, theres no evidence that regular Russian troops are involved in the current fighting.

But Kievs advances have also contributed to the rekindling of the war. Since last abandoning its policy of disengagement last fall, Ukraine has been making increasingly frequent incursions into the gray zone the no mans land between government and separatist forces along the front line that the two sides have fought over since the signing of the first failed peace agreement in September 2014. Separatists have more recently started making their own incursions into the no mans land. The result is that the gray zone in eastern Ukraine has become a tinderbox: In many places along the front line, only a few hundred yards divide government troops from Russian-backed separatists.

Both sides have drawn criticism from the OSCE and other groups that fear this shrinking divide could lead to renewed violence. Speaking several days before the current escalation began, Alexander Hug, the deputy chief monitor of the OSCEs Special Monitoring Mission to Ukraine, said he was concerned about the buildup of heavy weaponry and military positions in the gray zone, warning that local cease-fire agreements could prompt both sides, including Ukraine, to create new realities on the ground in order to negotiate from a stronger position in the future.

At the same time, the Ukrainian presidents office has used the escalation to remind Trump of the costs of rapprochement with Russian President Vladimir Putin: The shelling is massive. Who would dare talk about lifting the sanctions in such circumstances? Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko said in a video address posted online on Jan. 31. Putin, meanwhile, accused Ukraine of provoking the escalation to do just that, saying that because Kiev aligned itself behind former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton in the 2016 U.S. presidential election, it is now forced to tomend ties withthe current U.S. administration. Ukraine, Putin continued, needs money right now and you can best get money from the EU the U.S., and financial institutions if you portray yourself as a victim of aggression.

The U.S. State Departments recent muted response to the outbreak of fighting, which did not mention Russias involvement, has only fueled further uncertainty for all parties involved. Similarly, the phrasing of a White House statement after a phone call between Trump and Poroshenko on Feb. 4 made some question the Trump administrations understanding of the war in Donbass. The readout referred to Ukraines long-running conflict with Russia, not mentioning Russias role in initiating and aggravating the war. Whats more, though U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Nikki Haley condemned Russian aggression in Ukraine and insisted on the maintenance of American sanctions related to Russias annexation of Crimea, she did not mention those tied to the Kremlins actions in Donbass.

Although the Ukrainian government is indeed looking for ways to make inroads with the Trump administration, its begun to tentatively explore avenues toward peace in Donbass. Poroshenko made a trip to Berlin on Jan. 30 which was cut short due to the surge in fighting in part so that he and German Chancellor Angela Merkel could discuss how to make Minsk work, said Alyona Getmanchuk, the director of the Institute of World Policy, a think tank in Kiev. Before Trumps election, Kievs terms had been clear: Ukraine would not make political concessions in areas like local elections for the separatist regions until Russia and the separatists had removed heavy weapons from the front and given Kiev back control of the eastern border with Russia. But, Getmanchuk said, with the election of Trump and support wavering in Washington, Kiev is prepared to consideraless-than-ideal agreement if Russia clearly shows it will compromise though Ukraine has been evasive about what that would look like.

Making Minsk work has always been easier said than done. Despite Trumps election and with it, the potential of reduced support from Washington the Ukrainian public and political elite remain reluctant to make any kind of deal in eastern Ukraine. Though polls show the military conflict in Donbass remains the most important issue for Ukrainians, only 9.2 percent of the population views the Minsk Agreements positively, and theres little public appetite for any talk of compromise.

On Dec. 29, influential Ukrainian oligarch Viktor Pinchuk set off a firestorm in Kiev by arguing in the op-ed section of the Wall Street Journal that Ukraine needed to make painful compromises for peace with Russian-backed separatists, including not letting Crimea get in the way of a peace deal, holding elections in the occupied territories, and abandoning Ukraines aspirations to become a member of the European Union. The article provoked a backlash from Ukrainian elected officials and pundits who called Pinchuk pro-Putin and quickly turned the businessman and his associates into political pariahs. The Ukrainian government shot its own salvo at the oligarch less than a week later: The deputy head of the Presidential Administration published a letter in the Wall Street Journal suggesting that Pinchuks proposal played into Russias appetites, inviting even more aggression and greater human suffering. Pinchuk was ultimately forced to back down, writing an article in Russian for Ukrainska Pravda, a popular news site, explaining that his initial op-ed had been misinterpreted and edited for an American audience.

But multiple sources close to the presidential administration say theres more to the story. The release of Pinchuks op-ed seems to have been orchestrated with the help of political consultants working for Poroshenko both to gauge Ukrainians willingness to compromise and, with Pinchuk and the Ukrainian president seeking a strong relationship with the incoming American administration, to say what they thought Trump wanted to hear. However, both seem to have misjudged popular opinion: The prevailing lesson of the Pinchuk affair seems to be that compromise remains a provocative proposition in Ukraine.

Even those who advocate for a less drastic compromise have come under fire in Ukraines charged political climate. Nadiya Savchenko, a Ukrainian pilot who was held in prison for two years in Russia on politically motivated charges and championed as a Ukrainian hero during her detention, was denounced as a traitor by hard-liners in January for suggesting that the only peaceful solution to the conflict in the east would involve Ukraine putting Crimea on the back burner in order to regain the separatist-controlled areas of eastern Ukraine.

And for some in Kiev, hawkishness has made for good politics. One person advocating the advance of Ukrainian forces into the gray zone is Oleksandr Turchynov, the secretary of Ukraines National Security and Defense Council (and acting president following the Maidan Revolution). This creeping offensive, as the policy has come to be known among military analysts and in the Ukrainian media, seems to be directed at garnering political support from the section of the public that is critical of the Minsk deal and would like to see a firmer stance taken in eastern Ukraine. Turchynov also advocated a complete blockade of Donbass in December to stop the flow of illegal goods into the separatist republics, which became a justification for the Ukrainian advance near the village of Novoluhanske in December 2016, one of the most significant incursions in recent months. Turchynovs stance probably has more to do with his political ambitions than with the uncertainty brought about by Trump: Rumors are swirling that he may have his eyes on the presidency in the future.

The popularity of positions expressed by people like Turchynov has pushed even those initially inclined toward peace to take more hawkish stances. Poroshenko was elected president in May 2014 on a platform of peace, and the coalition he built after coming into power, known as the party of peace, engaged in a national debate with then-Prime Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuks more hawkish camp about how to resolve the conflict in the east. But in September 2015, Poroshenko began to change his rhetoric as a peaceful resolution became less popular, ultimately taking up the mantle of war as Yatsenyuks governing coalition fell apart in late 2015, leading to his resignation in April 2016. By the winter of 2015-16, there was no longer a group that would speak in support of a peaceful resolution, said Mikhail Minakov, president of the Foundation for Good Politics and a professor at Kyiv-Mohyla Academy.

The lack of opposition to Poroshenkos war rhetoric means that many subscribe to the idea that peace can be won only through war. But if the previous Minsk Agreements are any guide, it wont be Ukraine imposing a settlement on Russia and the separatists: Ukraine was forced to accept the Minsk I and II Agreements on Russias terms following massive losses at the hands of Russian units in bloody battles at Ilovaisk and Debaltseve, respectively. Unless a more conciliatory approach takes hold in Kiev, this seems likely to be the paradigm for any peace deal, whenever it is signed.

All of this presents a troubling picture of what the war in eastern Ukraine may become without Washington and the Ukraine coalition it has led involved in the peace process. Former Vice President Joe Biden, who handled the Ukraine portfolio for the White House and communicated regularly with Poroshenko, played a moderating role in subduing Kievs more hawkish impulses and keeping them committed to the Minsk deal. For the moment, most eyes in Washington and elsewhere alarmed at the recent uptick in violence are trained on what they view as an emboldened Kremlin. But the fighting in eastern Ukraine is complex and as much driven by domestic as international factors. Right now, Minakov said, there is no party of peace in Ukraine.

Photo Credit:SERGEI SUPINSKY/AFP/Getty Images

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Kiev Is Fueling the War in Eastern Ukraine, Too - Foreign Policy (blog)

Another take on Putin, Trump and Ukraine – The Guardian

Ukrainian servicemen ride an armed personal carrier on a street in Avdiivka in Donetsk, Ukraine. Moscow has desperately tried to keep the Donbas conflict frozen, writes Professor Richard Sakwa. Photograph: Markiian Lyseiko/EPA

Jonathan Freedland (First on the White House agenda: the collapse of the global order. Next, war?, 4 February) asserts that with his swooning admirer in the White House, Vladimir Putin feels free to flex his muscles, and has launched an offensive in eastern Ukraine. As so often in recent coverage of Russia, the opposite is the case. Moscow has desperately tried to keep the Donbass conflict frozen, and has restrained the various militias from responding.

In recent weeks, we have watched with increasing alarm as Ukrainian forces have pushed forward into the demilitarised demarcation line in a bite and hold strategy. This was admitted by the Ukrainian deputy defence minister, Igor Pavlovsky, when he stated that step by step our boys have been advancing. The rebel forces in the Donbass have nothing to gain by a renewed offensive, but in the end were forced to respond.

It is worrying that the Guardian seems to have an enthusiasm for demonising Putin and discrediting the present Russian government. This only helps to undermine the liberal international order, which seems unable to uphold the values that it proclaims, and which now generates conflict, rather than seeking negotiated solutions.

Freedland is right in one thing, though: the stakes could not be higher and war is on the horizon. In these circumstances, balance and responsibility are essential. Professor Richard Sakwa School of politics and international relations, University of Kent

I cannot share Jonathan Freedlands apocalyptic vision. That America has been convulsed by war every 80 to 100 years does not mean that it is due for another such convulsion. A sounder historical analysis, as argued persuasively by the American academic Steven Pinker, points to democracy as one of the the reasons why world wars have been avoided since 1945.

Has one mature democracy ever invaded another mature democracy? When Trump or his henchmen start ordering the arrest of opposing or satirical journalists, I shall join Mr Freedland on the demonstrations. Trump may like the idea of journalists disappearing, as has happened in PutinsRussia, but he will surely discover that the democratic freedoms in America are too deeply entrenched. David Simmonds Woking, Surrey

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Another take on Putin, Trump and Ukraine - The Guardian

Ukraine Central Bank Presses for Exit of Kremlin-owned Banks – Voice of America

KYIV, UKRAINE

The Ukrainian central bank is stepping up efforts to edge Russian state-owned commercial banks out of the local market, though that process should be gradual to avoid disruptions, one of its deputy chiefs said Tuesday.

Five Russian state-owned banks operate in Ukraine, including three in the top 20, and they hold a combined market share of 8.6 percent.

The central bank has sought to cut that following a breakdown in bilateral relations in 2014 because of Moscow's annexation of Crimea and support for pro-Russian separatists.

"We want them to leave our market painlessly," deputy chief Kateryna Rozhkova told journalists. "There are two options: Either find a new owner or gradually reduce your presence."

Two of the Russian banks, VEB and VTB, are already in talks to sell their Ukrainian subsidiaries, and Rozhkova said the central bank expected progress by the end of the first quarter.

The three others are Sberbank and subsidiaries of Kremlin-owned BM Bank and VS Bank.

In 2014, the central bank introduced restrictions on the five banks, banning them from increasing their assets and deposits. This resulted in their market share falling by half.

A recent deadly escalation in Ukraine's nearly three-year-old separatist conflict prompted a few dozen protesters to gather outside a branch of Sberbank in Kyiv, demanding that it stop operating in the country.

But Rozhkova said it was not in Ukraine's interests for the banks to close abruptly. Together, they hold 22 billion hryvnias ($815 million) in Ukrainian consumer deposits and 16 billion hryvnias in business deposits.

The central bank is formulating a scheme to transfer loans owed to these banks by Ukrainian companies elsewhere, she said.

She said central bank experts had found no evidence that the banks financed separatists in eastern Ukraine, as claimed by some Ukrainian politicians.

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Ukraine Central Bank Presses for Exit of Kremlin-owned Banks - Voice of America