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Zelensky says Ukraine will 'defend its people' as Kremlin claims vote victory
by AFP Staff Writers
Kyiv, Ukraine (AFP) Sept 27, 2022

NATO chief slams annexation votes in Ukraine
Brussels (AFP) Sept 27, 2022 - The Moscow organised votes in four occupied regions in Ukraine on annexation by Russia are a "sham" and "a blatant violation of international law," NATO's chief Jens Stoltenberg said Tuesday.

Stoltenberg tweeted that he spoke with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky "and made clear that NATO Allies are unwavering in our support for Ukraine's sovereignty and right to self-defence".

"The sham referenda held by Russia have no legitimacy and are a blatant violation of international law. These lands are Ukraine," Stoltenberg said.

His declaration was made on the fifth and final day of the Moscow-organised voting in the Ukrainian regions, where Kremlin-installed authorities were already claiming the uncounted ballots had gone Russia's way.

While NATO is not directly involved in the war in Ukraine, the blowback from the conflict -- especially from soaring energy prices -- has been felt across Europe, where countries make up the bulk of the alliance's membership.

The energy issue became even more dramatic with leaks from two currently non-operational gas pipelines linking Russia to Germany, with Denmark and Poland raising suspicions of sabotage.

Stoltenberg, later speaking to centre-left EU lawmakers, said that while facts of the pipeline leaks were not yet clear, "Russia is now weaponising energy".

He added that Russia had exacerbated the situation by holding "sham" votes, mobilising more personnel into its army, and threatening nuclear strikes if attempts were made to break its grip on areas it holds.

"All this is a serious escalation of the conflict. Our message is that any use of nuclear weapons is absolutely unacceptable," Stoltenberg said.

"It will totally change the nature of the conflict and Russia must know that the nuclear war cannot be won and must never be fought."

He said that "no-one can tell how long" the war in Ukraine would go on for and that NATO allies were ready "to continue to provide support to Ukraine for the long haul".

To that end, NATO countries need to "ramp up" the production of weapons, after depleting national arsenals to supply Ukraine's armed forces.

He said he chaired an extraordinary meeting of NATO officials in charge armaments early Tuesday and "we are now discussing how we, also in cooperation with the European Union, can ensure that we produce more" to boost supplies to Ukraine and ensure allies' defence.

Ukraine will "defend" citizens in Moscow-held regions which authorities said voted overwhelmingly for a merger with Russia, President Volodymyr Zelensky said on Tuesday.

"We will act to protect our people: both in the Kherson region, in the Zaporizhzhia region, in the Donbas, in the currently occupied areas of the Kharkiv region, and in the Crimea," he said in a video posted on Telegram.

"This farce in the occupied territory cannot even be called an imitation of referendums," he said.

Officials in four Moscow-occupied regions of Ukraine claimed victory in the referendums, slammed as sham ballots by Kyiv and its Western allies.

Earlier, Zelensky told the United Nations that Ukraine would not be able to negotiate with Russia after the votes.

"Russia's recognition of the pseudo-referendums as 'normal', implementation of the so-called Crimean scenario, and yet another attempt to annex Ukrainian territory means that there is nothing to talk about with (the) current Russian president," he said in a video message at a meeting of the UN security council.

"In front of the eyes of the whole world, Russia is conducting an outright farce called a 'referendum' on the occupied territory of Ukraine," he said.

"People are forced to fill out some papers for a TV picture under the muzzles of machine guns.

"The figures of the alleged results of the pseudo-referendum were drawn in advance," he said.

Kremlin proxies claim victory in 'sham' annexation votes
Kyiv, Ukraine (AFP) Sept 28, 2022 - Kremlin-installed authorities in four Ukrainian regions under Russian control claimed victory Tuesday in annexation votes, drawing global outrage, as Moscow warned it could use nuclear weapons to defend the territories.

Ukraine and its allies have denounced the so-called referendums as a sham, saying the West would never recognise the results of the ballots, which have dramatically ratcheted up the stakes of Russia's seven-month invasion.

Pro-Russian authorities in Zaporizhzhia said 93.11 percent of voters backed joining Russia, according to preliminary results on Tuesday evening.

In Kherson, another Moscow-occupied region in southern Ukraine, officials said more than 87.05 percent of electors supported the move after all the ballots were counted.

In the eastern Lugansk region controlled by pro-Russia separatists, local authorities said more than 98.42 percent voted in favour of annexation, according to local authorities.

Officials in the Moscow-held Donetsk region claimed victory as well, with the local poll body saying 99.23 percent of the vote was for annexation.

"Saving people in the territories where this referendum is taking place... is the focus of the attention of our entire society and of the entire country," Russian President Vladimir Putin said earlier during a televised meeting with officials.

His spokesman Dmitry Peskov said the votes would have "radical" legal implications and that the so-called referendums "will also have consequences for security", referring to Moscow's threats to use nuclear weapons to defend its territory.

- 'Nothing to talk about' -

Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelensky vowed Tuesday that Kyiv would defend its citizens in Moscow-held regions and rejected the referendums as a "farce".

He said the votes mean Kyiv will not negotiate with Moscow.

"There is nothing to talk about with (the) current Russian president," Zelensky said.

Russian forces this month have suffered serious setbacks in Ukraine's east and south, which observers say pushed Putin to rush ahead with the vote to cement Moscow's authority there.

Putin said Russia would use all available means to defend its territory, implying that after annexation, Moscow could deploy nuclear weapons to repulse Ukrainian attempts to retake the territory.

"I want to remind you -- the deaf who hear only themselves: Russia has the right to use nuclear weapons if necessary," former leader Dmitry Medvedev -- a Putin ally who is now deputy chairman of Russia's security council -- said on social media Tuesday.

Pentagon spokesman Brigadier General Patrick Ryder said the United States was taking the reiterated threat "seriously" but had seen nothing to cause Washington to change its nuclear posture.

NATO chief Jens Stoltenberg said that "Russia must know that the nuclear war cannot be won and must never be fought."

The four Russian-occupied regions of Ukraine announced that they would hold the elections just days before voting began last Friday.

Together, they form a crucial land connection for the Kremlin between Russia and the Crimean peninsula, which Moscow annexed in 2014 and is otherwise only connected to the mainland by bridge.

- 'Diabolical scheme' -

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken vowed that the West would never recognise Russian annexations of the territories, threatening Moscow with "additional swift and severe costs" for its "diabolical scheme".

French Foreign Minister Catherine Colonna, in Kyiv for a surprise visit to meet Zelensky, called the polls a "masquerade" that would trigger further Western sanctions.

At the United Nations, top official Rosemary DiCarlo told a meeting of the Security Council the body "remains fully committed" to Ukraine's territorial integrity "within its internationally recognised borders."

The United States intends to submit a resolution urging UN member states "not to recognise any altered status of Ukraine and obligating Russia to withdraw its troops from Ukraine," said US envoy Linda Thomas-Greenfield.

However, there is no chance of the Security Council reaching a united stance on the annexation move.

Vassily Nebenzia, Russia's UN ambassador, made clear Russia would wield its Security Council veto again, criticising the move as "temper tantrums of the Western delegations."

"The referendums were conducted exclusively transparently, with upholding of all the electoral norms," Nebenzia argued, adding that the West's only aim was to "weaken and bleed dry Russia as much as possible".

Polling stations were open in Crimea for people who fled fighting after the Russian invasion in February.

"With my voice I want to try to make a small contribution to stopping the war," 63-year-old Galina Korsakova from Donetsk told AFP.

"I really want to go home."

The so-called referendums follow a pattern that Moscow utilised in Crimea after nationwide street demonstrations saw Ukraine's Kremlin-friendly president ousted.

As in Crimea, observers saw the outcome as a foregone conclusion. Election officials brought ballot boxes door-to-door, in many cases accompanied by armed Russian forces.

According to Russian state media, the next step is for Russia's parliament, the State Duma, to approve an annexation bill formally incorporating the four regions into Russian territory. This could happen Wednesday and would be followed by Russian upper house approval.

Putin is then expected on Friday to formally declare the Ukrainian regions part of Russia, according to Russian news agencies.

Ukrainian forces are pursuing their counter-offensive in the east.

The governor of the eastern Kharkiv region announced Tuesday its forces had recaptured Kupiansk-Vuzlovyi, "one of the largest logistical and railway junctions" in the region. It is not participating in this week's vote.


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Chinese and Ukrainian foreign ministers meet in New York: Chinese foreign ministry
Beijing (AFP) Sept 23, 2022
Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi met his Ukrainian counterpart Dmytro Kuleba on the sidelines of the United Nations General Assembly in New York, the Chinese foreign ministry said Friday. The meeting was the first between the two since the February invasion of Ukraine by Russia - though they have held two phone calls. On Friday, the Moscow-held regions of Ukraine are voting on whether to become part of Russia in referendums that Kyiv and its allies have condemned as an unlawful land grab. ... read more

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