Berliner Boersenzeitung - Russia's Putin announces military operation in Ukraine

EUR -
AED 4.321861
AFN 81.200765
ALL 97.616692
AMD 452.43926
ANG 2.106058
AOA 1079.140893
ARS 1449.265402
AUD 1.789699
AWG 2.121212
AZN 2.00124
BAM 1.951798
BBD 2.376427
BDT 144.383923
BGN 1.957717
BHD 0.443659
BIF 3459.841359
BMD 1.176817
BND 1.498627
BOB 8.133322
BRL 6.365518
BSD 1.176986
BTN 100.353213
BWP 15.548117
BYN 3.851801
BYR 23065.609063
BZD 2.364252
CAD 1.59757
CDF 3395.116416
CHF 0.934775
CLF 0.028452
CLP 1091.838782
CNY 8.43236
CNH 8.437176
COP 4695.498988
CRC 594.181556
CUC 1.176817
CUP 31.185645
CVE 110.473663
CZK 24.631924
DJF 209.143853
DKK 7.461118
DOP 70.432185
DZD 152.34005
EGP 58.082088
ERN 17.652252
ETB 159.399244
FJD 2.630423
FKP 0.863906
GBP 0.861295
GEL 3.200863
GGP 0.863906
GHS 12.179656
GIP 0.863906
GMD 84.144119
GNF 10186.525934
GTQ 9.049443
GYD 246.245044
HKD 9.236117
HNL 30.808946
HRK 7.534924
HTG 154.54309
HUF 398.787318
IDR 19097.382851
ILS 3.917156
IMP 0.863906
INR 100.505565
IQD 1541.629994
IRR 49573.407255
ISK 142.383193
JEP 0.863906
JMD 188.034412
JOD 0.834402
JPY 170.30184
KES 152.400959
KGS 102.91226
KHR 4731.980293
KMF 491.909358
KPW 1059.166398
KRW 1603.871873
KWD 0.359284
KYD 0.980889
KZT 611.565907
LAK 25366.285986
LBP 105442.784641
LKR 353.105912
LRD 235.952961
LSL 20.676409
LTL 3.474834
LVL 0.711845
LYD 6.330676
MAD 10.563401
MDL 19.820356
MGA 5219.182352
MKD 61.518559
MMK 2470.381248
MNT 4219.220358
MOP 9.516086
MRU 46.727589
MUR 52.803666
MVR 18.123811
MWK 2043.545394
MXN 21.949093
MYR 4.969106
MZN 75.269392
NAD 20.676656
NGN 1805.837446
NIO 43.247927
NOK 11.831439
NPR 160.564742
NZD 1.936239
OMR 0.452489
PAB 1.176986
PEN 4.184747
PGK 4.936724
PHP 66.426624
PKR 334.156977
PLN 4.2421
PYG 9383.757423
QAR 4.284319
RON 5.058313
RSD 117.150945
RUB 93.057992
RWF 1687.555275
SAR 4.413225
SBD 9.811033
SCR 16.585264
SDG 706.684128
SEK 11.264375
SGD 1.499447
SHP 0.924793
SLE 26.41966
SLL 24677.263968
SOS 672.554902
SRD 43.759929
STD 24357.731547
SVC 10.298881
SYP 15300.713136
SZL 20.676759
THB 38.168889
TJS 11.410901
TMT 4.130627
TND 3.398057
TOP 2.756221
TRY 46.863869
TTD 7.974647
TWD 34.047784
TZS 3096.839276
UAH 49.144922
UGX 4222.341557
USD 1.176817
UYU 47.153306
UZS 14833.775534
VES 128.830248
VND 30832.59987
VUV 139.981303
WST 3.061526
XAF 654.61463
XAG 0.032006
XAU 0.000354
XCD 3.180406
XDR 0.813634
XOF 654.900069
XPF 119.331742
YER 284.966467
ZAR 20.612676
ZMK 10592.766693
ZMW 28.394773
ZWL 378.934526
  • CMSC

    0.0900

    22.314

    +0.4%

  • CMSD

    0.0250

    22.285

    +0.11%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    69.04

    0%

  • SCS

    0.0400

    10.74

    +0.37%

  • RELX

    0.0300

    53

    +0.06%

  • RIO

    -0.1400

    59.33

    -0.24%

  • GSK

    0.1300

    41.45

    +0.31%

  • NGG

    0.2700

    71.48

    +0.38%

  • BP

    0.1750

    30.4

    +0.58%

  • BTI

    0.7150

    48.215

    +1.48%

  • BCC

    0.7900

    91.02

    +0.87%

  • JRI

    0.0200

    13.13

    +0.15%

  • VOD

    0.0100

    9.85

    +0.1%

  • BCE

    -0.0600

    22.445

    -0.27%

  • RYCEF

    0.1000

    12

    +0.83%

  • AZN

    -0.1200

    73.71

    -0.16%

Russia's Putin announces military operation in Ukraine

Russia's Putin announces military operation in Ukraine

Russian President Vladimir Putin announced a "military operation" in Ukraine on Thursday and called on soldiers there to lay down their arms, defying Western outrage and global appeals not to launch a war.

Text size:

Putin made a surprise statement on television to declare his intentions.

"I have made the decision of a military operation," he said shortly before 6:00am (0300 GMT) in Moscow, as he vowed retaliation against anyone who interfered.

He also called on the Ukraine military to lay down its arms.

His statement came after the Kremlin said rebel leaders in eastern Ukraine had asked Moscow for military help against Kyiv.

In response, Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelensky made an emotional late-night appeal to Russians not to support a "major war in Europe".

Speaking Russian, Zelensky said that the people of Russia are being lied to about Ukraine and that the possibility of war also "depends on you".

"Who can stop (the war)? People. These people are among you, I am sure," he said.

Zelensky said he had tried to call Putin but there was "no answer, only silence", adding that Moscow now had around 200,000 soldiers near Ukraine's borders.

Earlier the separatist leaders of Donetsk and Lugansk sent separate letters to Putin, asking him to "help them repel Ukraine's aggression", Putin's spokesman Dmitry Peskov said.

The two letters were published by Russian state media and were both dated February 22.

Their appeals came after Putin recognised their independence and signed friendship treaties with them that include defence deals.

Tens of thousands of Russian troops are stationed near Ukraine's borders, and the West had said for days that an attack was imminent.

- 'Moment of peril' -

Putin has defied a barrage of international criticism over the crisis, with some Western leaders saying he was no longer rational.

His announcement of the military operation came ahead of a last-ditch summit involving European Union leaders in Brussels planned for Thursday.

The 27-nation bloc had also imposed sanctions on Russia's defence minister Sergei Shoigu and high-ranking figures including the commanders of Russia's army, navy and air force, another part of the wave of Western punishment after Putin sought to rewrite Ukraine's borders.

The United Nations Security Council met late Wednesday for its second emergency session in three days over the crisis, with a personal plea there by UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres to Putin going unheeded.

"President Putin, stop your troops from attacking Ukraine, give peace a chance, too many people have already died," Guterres said.

The US ambassador to the United Nations, Linda Thomas-Greenfield, warned that an all-out Russian invasion could displace five million people, triggering a new European refugee crisis.

Before Putin's announcement, Ukraine had urged its approximately three million citizens living in Russia to leave.

"We are united in believing that the future of European security is being decided right now, here in our home, in Ukraine," President Zelensky said during a joint media appearance with the visiting leaders of Poland and Lithuania.

Western capitals said Russia had amassed 150,000 troops in combat formations on Ukraine's borders with Russia, Belarus and Russian-occupied Crimea and on warships in the Black Sea.

Ukraine has around 200,000 military personnel and Wednesday's call up could see up to 250,000 reservists aged between 18 and 60 receive their mobilisation papers.

Moscow's total forces are much larger -- around a million active-duty personnel -- and have been modernised and re-armed in recent years.

- High cost of war -

But Ukraine has received advanced anti-tank weapons and some drones from NATO members. More have been promised as the allies try to deter a Russian attack or at least make it costly.

Shelling had intensified in recent days between Ukrainian forces and Russia-backed separatists -- a Ukrainian soldier was killed on Wednesday, the sixth in four days -- and civilians living near the front were fearful.

Dmitry Maksimenko, a 27-year-old coal miner from government-held Krasnogorivka, told AFP that he was shocked when his wife came to tell him that Putin had recognised the two Russian-backed separatist enclaves.

"She said: 'Have you heard the news?'. How could I have known? There's no electricity, never mind internet. I don't know what is going to happen next, but to be honest, I'm afraid," he said.

In a Russian village around 50 kilometres (30 miles) from the border, AFP reporters saw military equipment including rocket launchers, howitzers and fuel tanks mounted on trains stretching for hundreds of metres.

Russia has long demanded that Ukraine be forbidden from ever joining the NATO alliance and that US troops pull out from Eastern Europe.

Speaking to journalists, Putin on Tuesday set out a number of stringent conditions if the West wanted to de-escalate the crisis, saying Ukraine should drop its NATO ambition and become neutral.

Washington Wednesday announced sanctions on the Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline, which Germany had earlier effectively suspended by halting certification.

Australia, Britain, Japan and the European Union have all also announced sanctions.

burs-kma/jfx

(H.Schneide--BBZ)