Ukraine: Russian MPs Approve Troops, NATO To Hold Meeting

Stop NATO
March 1, 2014
1) Federation Council committees support Putin’s letter on use of army in Ukraine
2) Parliament approves Putin request for military action in Ukraine
3) NATO’s top civilian body to discuss Ukraine
4) Crimean demonstrators: No to fascism! No to Nazism!
5) Interfax headlines:
Russian upper house to ask for ambassador to be recalled from U.S.
Russian legislator slams Obama for “direct threat” to Russia
Yanukovych asks Russian parliament to help Crimea – lawmaker
Russian Duma to “definitely” send observers to Crimea referendum – lawmaker
New Ukrainian authorities’ decisions to be contested in intl courts – Duma deputy
Russia’s Northern, Baltic Fleet units performing training missions in Baltic, Barents Seas:
Defense Ministry
1)
Itar-Tass
March 1, 2014
Federation Council committees support Putin’s letter on use of army in Ukraine
MOSCOW: The Committee on International Relations of the Federation Council, the upper house of Russian parliament, on Saturday, March 1, supported President Vladimir Putin’s appeal regarding the use of the Russian Armed Forces in Ukraine pending normalisation of the situation in the neighbouring country.
The Federation Council Committee on Security also supported the president’s appeal. Both committees advised the upper house to uphold it, Security Committee Chair Viktor Ozerov and International Relation Committee Chair Vladimir Dzhabarov said.
The Federation Council was summoned for an urgent meeting on Saturday to discuss Putin’s letter.
“In connection with the extraordinary situation in Ukraine, the threat to the lives of citizens of the Russian Federation, our compatriots, the personnel of the military contingent of the Armed Forces of the Russian Federation deployed in the territory of Ukraine (Autonomous Republic of Crimea) in accordance with an international treaty, and pursuant to Article 102-1(d) of the Constitution of the Russian Federation, I hereby submit to the Federation Council of the Federal Assembly of the Russian Federation a letter on the use of the Armed Forces of the Russian Federation in the territory of Ukraine pending normalisation of the social and political situation in that country,” the president said in his letter to the Federation Council.
Earlier in the day, the Federation Council asked Putin to take “exhaustive measures” to protect Russians in Ukraine.
“We have urgently summoned the house Council and thought it necessary to make a statement assessing the current situation in Ukraine,” Federation Council Chairperson Valentina Matviyenko said.
“Today there is a real threat to the life and security of Russian citizens living in Ukraine. There is a threat to our military in Sevastopol and the Black Sea Fleet, and I think that Russia should not be a bystander,” she said.
The main purpose of the Federation Council’s appeal to the president is to urge him “to take exhaustive measures, all possible measures, to ensure the security of our citizens living in Ukraine, help our brotherly Ukrainian people achieve stabilisation and channel the current crisis into a civilised legal track so that the agreements that were signed by the opposition leaders and the head of state were implemented strictly,” Matviyenko said.
She noted that members of the Federation Council “asked the president to take exhaustive measures to prevent further escalation and put the resolution of the political crisis onto a legal track so that those who have grabbed power did not hurry so much and did not trample upon the rights of people and different regions of Ukraine.”
In accordance with Article 102-1(d) of the Russian Constitution, issues concerning the use of the Russian Armed Forces outside the country fall under the jurisdiction of the Federation Council, which considers them following the relevant request from the president.
The Federation Council debates such issues after studying the president’s request which should contain sound reasons for his proposal.
The Federation Council chair then sends the request to the upper house’s committee on defence and security and committee on international relations, which prepare their conclusions.
After that the Federation Council studies the possibility of using the Russian Armed Forces outside the country at its nearest sitting after receipt of the president’s request. The president and the prime minister are invited to attend the sitting which begins with a report delivered by the president himself or his representative, followed by the reading of the conclusions made by the Federation Council committees on defence and security and on international relations.
A decision allowing the use of the Russian Armed Forces outside the country is to be adopted by a majority of Federation Council members and is then formalised in a resolution of the upper house. The document is forwarded to the president within two days of its adoption.
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2)
Russian Information Agency Novosti
March 1, 2014
Parliament Approves Putin Request for Military Action in Ukraine
MOSCOW: Russia’s upper house of parliament on Saturday approved a request from President Vladimir Putin to use armed force in Ukraine.
Putin made the request because of what he said was a threat to the lives of Russian citizens and military forces located in naval bases in Crimea.
The Federation Council voted unanimously in support of military action.
The move comes after reports of large Russian troop movements in the southern Ukrainian peninsula of Crimea, and a week after the opposition swept to power in Kiev when ousted President Viktor Yanukovych suddenly left the city.
Russian troops will remain deployed until the “political-social situation in the country is normalized,” the Kremlin said in a statement requesting the intervention.
Senators in the Federation Council lined up during an extraordinary session Saturday afternoon to express their support for armed intervention.
Lawmakers accused the United States and European countries of open support for violent protesters in Ukraine.
The decision follows a wave of pro-Russian protests in southern and eastern Ukraine, as well as calls from the newly elected prime minister of Crimea for Putin to intervene.
The ratcheting up of Russian rhetoric over Ukraine and widespread reports of the presence of Russian troops already maneuvering on Ukrainian soil has provoked outrage in Kiev and condemnation from world leaders.
US President Barack Obama said Friday that he was deeply concerned about Russian troop movements inside Ukraine, and warned that violations of Ukraine’s sovereignty would be deeply destabilizing.
Officials from the interim Ukrainian government have said Russia is trying to provoke conflict, and have called on the Kremlin to withdraw all soldiers back to Russian naval bases on the Black Sea coast.
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3)
Interfax-Ukraine
March 1, 2014
North Atlantic Council to consider situation in Ukraine on March 3 – acting foreign minister
 
NATO will convene the North Atlantic Council to consider the situation in Ukraine.
“A special meeting of the North Atlantic Council regarding Ukraine will take place on Monday,” acting Ukrainian Foreign Minister Andriy Deschytsia said at a briefing.
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4)
Itar-Tass
March 1, 2014
Crimeans march through Simferopol and go back to central square for rally
SIMFEROPOL: Thousands of demonstrators marched through the streets of Simferopol, the capital of Ukraine’s autonomy of Crimea, on Saturday, March 1, and returned to central Lenin Square where they had started.
About 5,000 people have gathered in the square. They are holding large Russian tricolour flags and chanting pro-Russian slogans. They are also carrying “No to fascism” and “No to Nazism” posters.
One of the demonstrators said through a loudspeaker that Russian flags had been hoisted in Odessa, Kharkov and several other Ukrainian cities.
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5)
Interfax
March 1, 2014
Headlines (stories available to subscribers only)
Russian upper house to ask for ambassador to be recalled from U.S.
Russian legislator slams Obama for “direct threat” to Russia
Yanukovych asks Russian parliament to help Crimea – lawmaker
Russian Duma to “definitely” send observers to Crimea referendum – lawmaker
New Ukrainian authorities’ decisions to be contested in intl courts – Duma deputy
Russia’s Northern, Baltic Fleet units performing training missions in Baltic, Barents Seas:
Defense Ministry

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