An international incident

Published: 24 October 2003 y., Friday
The Russians were coming, with their bulldozers and their trucks full of dirt, bringing an invading sea wall through the Sea of Azov ever closer to Ukrainian shores. In response, Ukrainian border guards staged a show of force yesterday on the tiny island of Taman, in the disputed waters of the Kerch Strait, with shields and clubs and guard dogs. Jet fighters shot missiles into the sea. A dredge dug frantically in the path of the wall, scooping away the landfill as soon as it was dumped. With the Ukrainian president, Leonid Kuchma, heading home urgently from a trip to South America and with an international incident suddenly on their hands, the Russians yesterday ordered a halt to the wall in the Azov sea. They had meant nothing by it, Foreign Minister Igor Ivanov said. The 3-mile-long wall was being built purely for "economic and ecological reasons." But clearly there was something more at stake. Ivanov was due next week in the Ukrainian capital, Kiev, for the latest in more than a dozen meetings this year over territorial disputes in the Azov sea and the Kerch Strait, with Ukraine's Crimean peninsula on one side and Russia on the other. Since September, trucks and bulldozers have been working around the clock, and they are now within easy binocular range of Taman Island. Control of the Kerch Strait and the Sea of Azov are among the last sensitive issues left unresolved in a border agreement signed in January by the two former Soviet republics. The strait is a key sea lane from the Azov to the Black Sea, Turkey and the Mediterranean. Russia wants to share sovereignty of the strait, but Ukraine claims a demarcation line that is costing Russia $200 million a year in shipping tolls, according to newspapers here.
Šaltinis: ukraine.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

A Presidential Decree

BELARUSIAN PRESIDENT CALLS FOR REGISTERING ALL WORK-ABROAD AGENCIES more »

Ukraine may backtrack on economic project

Ukraine is to review an agreement on the Common Economic Area project of Russia, Ukraine, Belarus and Kazakhstan, Ukraine’s new president Viktor Yushchenko told reporters in Krakov, Poland, on Thursday more »

Lithuania supports Albania's bid for EU, NATO membership

Lithuanian Foreign Minister Antanas Valionis said on Wednesday that Lithuania supports Albania's bid to join the European Union and the NATO more »

Putin gives CIS partners priority in foreign policy

Russian President Vladimir Putin onFriday emphasized that the work with members of the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS) is a priority in the Russian foreign policy more »

On Russian-Estonian relations

ESTONIAN PRESIDENT: RUSSIAN-ESTONIAN RELATIONS WILL BE IMPROVING more »

UN COUNTERTERRORISM COMMITTEE MEETS IN KAZAKHSTAN

Kazakh President Nursultan Nazarbaev addressed a meeting of the UN Counterterrorism Committee in Almaty on 26 January more »

PACE Criticizes Armenian Occupation Of Azerbaijani Territories

Armenia and Azerbaijan should actively submit constructive proposals to each other via the OSCE’s Minsk Group for achieving a settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, the Assembly said today more »

Ukraine president vows democracy

The Ukrainian President has told the Council of Europe that there will be no going back on democratic changes in his country more »

No one pressing Russia out of Georgia - Saakashvili

Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili has described as erroneous the opinion that Russia is being pressed out of Georgia more »

RUSSIAN-UKRAINIAN RELATIONS

Speaking on the occasion of Mr. Yuschenko's visit to Moscow, Vladimir Putin stated that it was important to bring the current relations between Russia and Ukraine up to date more »