Sanctions on Russia over Ukraine could come this week

Series of sanctions will be imposed if Moscow fails to respond positively to proposition

Sergei Aksyonov, Crimea’s pro-Russian prime minister, stands as a member of a pro-Russian self defence unit takes an oath to Crimea government in Simferopol. Photograph: Reuters
Sergei Aksyonov, Crimea’s pro-Russian prime minister, stands as a member of a pro-Russian self defence unit takes an oath to Crimea government in Simferopol. Photograph: Reuters

French foreign minister Laurent Fabius said today that sanctions against Russia over Ukraine could be imposed as early as this week if Moscow failed to respond positively to a proposition designed to calm the crisis.

Mr Fabius told radio station France Inter that a referendum in the Crimea region on joining Russia set for March 16th was illegitimate and that the annexation of the region by Russia would be illegal.

“We cannot accept something that is illegal and which will also have very serious consequences,” Fabius said.

The minister said the “only legitimate vote” was that for the president of Ukraine on May 25th.

READ SOME MORE

Mr Fabius said US Secretary of State John Kerry had sent a proposition to Moscow in an effort to calm the situation.

“If they respond positively, John Kerry will go to Moscow, and in that case the sanctions won’t be immediate,” he said. “If they don’t respond, or if they respond negatively, in that case there are a series of sanctions that can be taken as early as this week.”

Mr Fabius said these could include freezing the assets of individual Russians or Ukrainians, as well as sanctions relating to travel visas.

A pro-Russian force opened fire in seizing a Ukrainian military base in Crimea yesterday and Nato announced reconnaissance flights along its eastern frontiers as confrontation around the Black Sea peninsula showed no sign of easing.

Agencies