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Annexation of Crimea by the Russian Federation

In February and March 2014, Russia invaded the Crimean Peninsula, part of Ukraine, and then annexed it. This took place in the relative power vacuum[31] immediately following the Revolution of Dignity and was the first act of the wider Russo-Ukrainian War.

Annexation of Crimea by the Russian Federation
Part of the Russo-Ukrainian War

Russian President Vladimir Putin signs the treaty of accession (annexation) with Crimean leaders in Moscow, 18 March 2014.
Date20 February[note 1] – 26 March 2014[7]
(1 month and 6 days)
Location
Result
Belligerents
Commanders and leaders
Units involved

Based in Crimea,
elements of
[9]: 11–12 

Navy

  • 510th Naval Inf Bde (Feodosiia)
  • 810th Naval Inf Bde (Simferopol)

Deployed to Crimea, elements of

Ground Forces

(GRU command)

Airborne

Navy

  • 382nd Naval Inf Bn (Temryuk)
  • 727th Naval Inf Bn (Astrakhan)

Special Operations Forces

Armed forces[9]: 11–12 

Navy

  • 36th Coastal Def Bde (at Perevalne)
    • 1st Naval Inf Bn (Feodosiia)
    • 56th Gds Bn (Sevastopol)
    • 501st Naval Inf Bn (Kerch)
  • 406th Artillery Bde (Simferopol)
  • 37th Comms and Control Rgt (Sevastopol)

Paramilitary

Interior troops

  • 9th Bde (Simferopol)
  • 15th Bn (Yevpatoriia)
  • 18th Spec Mot Militia Bn (Haspra)
  • 42nd Operational Rgt (Sevastopol)
  • 47th Bde (Feodosiia)

Border guards

  • Special-Purpose Border Guard Bn (Yalta)
Strength

Protesters

Volunteer units[11][13]

  • 5,000 (Sevastopol)
  • 1,700 (Simferopol)

Russian military forces

  • 20,000–30,000 troops[14]

Protesters

Ukrainian military forces

  • 5,000–22,000 troops[17][18]
  • 40,000 reservists, partly mobilised (outside Crimea)[19]
Casualties and losses
1 Crimean SDF trooper killed[20]
  • 2 soldiers killed[21]
  • 60–80 soldiers detained[22]
  • 9,268 military servicemen and 7,050 civilian employees defected[23][24]
2 civilian deaths (during the protests),[25][26] 1 civilian killed[27][28] (by Crimean SDF under command of a former Russian serviceman)[29][30]

The events in Kyiv that ousted Ukrainian president Viktor Yanukovych on 22 February 2014 sparked pro-Russian demonstrations as of 23 February against the incoming Ukrainian government. At the same time Russian president Vladimir Putin discussed Ukrainian events with security service chiefs remarking that "we must start working on returning Crimea to Russia". On 27 February, Russian troops[32] seized strategic sites across Crimea,[33][34] followed by the installation of the pro-Russian Aksyonov government in Crimea, the Crimean status referendum, and the declaration of Crimea's independence on 16 March 2014.[35][36] Although Russia initially claimed their military was not involved in the events,[37] Putin later admitted that troops were deployed to "stand behind Crimea's self-defence forces".[38] Russia formally incorporated Crimea on 18 March 2014.[39][38] Following the annexation,[40] Russia escalated its military presence on the peninsula and made threats to solidify the new status quo on the ground.[41]

Ukraine and many other countries condemned the annexation and consider it to be a violation of international law and Russian agreements safeguarding the territorial integrity of Ukraine. The annexation led to the other members of the G8 suspending Russia from the group[42] and introducing sanctions. The United Nations General Assembly also rejected the referendum and annexation, adopting a resolution affirming the "territorial integrity of Ukraine within its internationally recognised borders",[43][44] and referring to the Russian action as a "temporary occupation".[45]

The Russian government opposes the "annexation" label, with Putin defending the referendum as complying with the principle of the self-determination of peoples.[46][47]

Other names

In Ukraine

The names of the Crimean annexation vary. In Ukraine, the annexation is known as the Temporary occupation of the Autonomous Republic of Crimea and Sevastopol by Russia (Ukrainian: Тимчасова окупація Автономної Республіки Крим і Севастополя Росією, romanizedTymchasova okupatsiia Avtonomnoi Respubliky Krym i Sevastopolia Rosiieiu), the illegal occupation of the Autonomous Republic of Crimea, the fall of Crimea, and the invasion of Crimea.[48][49][50][51]

In Russia

In the Russian Federation, it is also known as the accession of Crimea to the Russian Federation (Russian: Присоединение Крыма к Российской Федерации, romanizedPrisoyedineniye Kryma k Rossiyskoy Federatsii), the return of Crimea (Russian: Возвращение Крыма, romanizedVosvrashchenie Kryma), and the reunification of Crimea.[52][53]

Background

 
Euromaidan in Kyiv, 11 December 2013

Crimea was part of the Crimean Khanate from 1441 until it was annexed by the Russian Empire in 1783. After the end of the empire in the first stages of the Russian Civil War there were a series of short-lived independent governments (Crimean People's Republic, Crimean Regional Government, Crimean SSR). They were followed by White Russian governments (General Command of the Armed Forces of South Russia and later South Russian Government).

In October 1921, the Bolshevik Russian SFSR gained control of the peninsula and instituted the Crimean Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic. Moscow joined the RSFSR with three other republics to form the Soviet Union the following year.

After the Second World War and the 1944 deportation of all of the indigenous Crimean Tatars by the Soviet government, the Crimean ASSR was stripped of its autonomy in 1946 and downgraded to the status of an oblast of the Russian SFSR. In 1954, the Crimean Oblast was transferred from the Russian SFSR to the Ukrainian SSR by decree of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the Soviet Union to commemorate the 300th anniversary of Ukraine's union with Russia.[54][55] In 1989, under Gorbachev's perestroika,[56] the Supreme Soviet declared that the deportation of the Crimean Tatars under Stalin had been illegal[57] and the mostly Muslim ethnic group was allowed to return to Crimea.[58]

In 1990, the Soviet of the Crimean Oblast proposed the restoration of the Crimean ASSR.[59] The oblast conducted a referendum in 1991, which asked whether Crimea should be elevated into a signatory of the New Union Treaty (that is, become a union republic on its own). By that time, though, the dissolution of the Soviet Union was well underway. The Crimean ASSR was restored for less than a year as part of Ukrainian SSR before the restoration of Ukrainian independence.[60] Newly independent Ukraine maintained Crimea's autonomous status,[61] while the Supreme Council of Crimea affirmed the peninsula's "sovereignty" as a part of Ukraine.[62][63] Ukrainian authorities limited Crimean autonomy in 1995.[64][65][clarification needed]

During the 1990s, the dispute over control of the Black Sea Fleet and Crimean naval facilities were source of tensions between Russia and Ukraine. In 1992, Vladimir Lukin, then chairman of the Russian parliament's Committee on Foreign Affairs, suggested that in order to pressure Ukraine to give up its claim to the Black Sea Fleet, Russia should question Ukrainian control over Crimea.[66] In 1998 the Partition Treaty divided the fleet and gave Russia a naval base in Sevastopol, and the Treaty of Friendship recognized the inviolability of existing borders. However, in 2003 Tuzla Island conflict issues over maritime border resurfaced.

In September 2008, the Ukrainian Foreign Minister Volodymyr Ohryzko accused Russia of giving Russian passports to the population in Crimea, and described it as a "real problem", given Russia's declared policy of military intervention abroad to protect Russian citizens.[67]

On 24 August 2009, anti-Ukrainian demonstrations were held in Crimea by ethnic Russian residents. Sergei Tsekov (of the Russian Bloc[68] and then deputy speaker of the Crimean parliament[69]) said then that he hoped that Russia would treat Crimea the same way as it had treated South Ossetia and Abkhazia.[70] Crimea is populated by an ethnic Russian majority and a minority of both ethnic Ukrainians and Crimean Tatars, and thus demographically possessed one of Ukraine's largest ethnically Russian populations.[71]

As early as in 2010, some analysts already speculated that the Russian government had irredentist plans. Taras Kuzio said that "Russia has an even more impossible time recognizing Ukraine's sovereignty over the Crimea and the port of Sevastopol – as seen by public opinion in Russia, statements by politicians, including members of the ruling United Russia party, experts and journalists".[72] In 2011, William Varettoni wrote that "Russia wants to annex Crimea and is merely waiting for the right opportunity, most likely under the pretense of defending Russian brethren abroad".[73]

Euromaidan and the Revolution of Dignity

The Euromaidan protest movement began in Kyiv in late November 2013 after President Viktor Yanukovych, of the Party of Regions, failed to sign the Ukraine–European Union Association Agreement[74] due to failure of Ukrainian Supreme Council (Rada) to pass promised required legislation.[75][76][77] Yanukovych won [78] the 2010 presidential election with strong support from voters in the Autonomous Republic of Crimea and southern and eastern Ukraine. The Crimean autonomous government strongly supported Yanukovych and condemned the protests, saying they were "threatening political stability in the country". The Crimean autonomous parliament said that it supported the government's decision to suspend negotiations on the pending association agreement and urged Crimeans to "strengthen friendly ties with Russian regions".[79][80][81]

On 4 February 2014, the Presidium of the Supreme Council considered holding a referendum on the peninsula's status, and asked the Russian government to guarantee the vote.[82][83] The Security Service of Ukraine (SBU) responded by opening a criminal case to investigate the possible "subversion" of Ukraine's territorial integrity.[84] On 20 February 2014, during a visit to Moscow, Chairman of the Supreme Council of Crimea Vladimir Konstantinov stated that the 1954 transfer of Crimea from the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic to the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic had been a mistake.[82]

The Euromaidan protests came to a head in late February 2014, and Yanukovych and many of his ministers fled the capital on 22 February.[85] After his flight, opposition parties and defectors from the Party of Regions put together a parliamentary quorum in the Verkhovna Rada (the Ukrainian parliament), and voted on 22 February to remove Yanukovych from his post on the grounds that he was unable to fulfill his duties,[86] although this legislative removal lacked the required three-quarter vote of sitting Rada members according to the constitution in effect at the time, which the Rada also voted to suspend.[87][88][89] Arseniy Yatsenyuk was appointed by the Rada to serve as the head of a caretaker government until new presidential and parliament elections could be held. This new government was recognised internationally, though the Russian government said that these events had been a "coup d'état" and that the caretaker government was illegitimate.[90][91]

Annexation

Russian invasion of Crimea

 
"Crimean self-defence forces", 2 March 2014
 
A pro-Ukrainian demonstration in Simferopol (Ukrainian flag on the left, Crimean Tatar flag on the right) during the Russian military intervention in Crimea, 9 March 2014
 
Medal of the Russian Defense Ministry "For the return of Crimea" (Russian: За возвращение Крыма), 20 February – 18 March 2014

The February 2014 revolution of Dignity that ousted Ukrainian president Viktor Yanukovych sparked a political crisis in Crimea, which initially manifested as demonstrations against the new interim Ukrainian government,[92] but rapidly escalated. In January 2014, the Sevastopol city council had already called for formation of "people's militia" units to "ensure firm defence" of the city from "extremism".[93][94]

One of the initial Russian disinformation stories was the false allegation of a Corsun Pogrom, which claimed that pro-Maidan Ukrainians stopped several buses with Anti-Maidan protesters on 20 February. Russian media sources described beating and humiliation among the protesters, while a fake news documentary claimed multiple tortured and killed people. No such event actually occurred and when human rights organizations tried to contact the producers of the documentary they found that no such organization existed. Human rights group attributed the fake story to "pro-Kremlin trolls".[95]

The Verkhovna Rada of Crimea members called for an extraordinary meeting on 21 February. In response to Russian separatist sentiment, the Security Service of Ukraine (SBU) said that it would "use severe measures to prevent any action taken against diminishing the territorial integrity and sovereignty of Ukraine".[note 2][clarification needed] The party with the largest number of seats in the Crimean parliament (80 of 100), the Party of Regions of Ukrainian president Viktor Yanukovych, did not discuss Crimean secession, and were supportive of an agreement between President Yanukovych[78] and Euromaidan activists to end the unrest that was struck on the same day in Kyiv.[97][98]

Russia was concerned that the new government avowedly committed to closer relations with the West put its strategic positions in Crimea at risk. On 22–23 February[note 3], Russian President Vladimir Putin[99] convened an all-night meeting with security services chiefs to discuss extrication of the deposed Ukrainian president, Viktor Yanukovych, and at the end of that meeting Putin had remarked that "we must start working on returning Crimea to Russia".[4][5] After that GRU and FSB began negotiating deals with local sympathizers to ensure that when the operation began there would be well‑armed "local self‑defense groups" on the streets for support.[9]: 11  On 23 February pro-Russian demonstrations were held in the Crimean city of Sevastopol.

Crimean prime minister Anatolii Mohyliov said that his government recognised the new provisional government in Kyiv, and that the Crimean autonomous government would carry out all laws passed by the Ukrainian parliament.[100] In Simferopol, following a pro-Russian demonstration the previous day where protesters had replaced the Ukrainian flag over the parliament with a Russian flag,[101] a pro-Euromaidan rally of between 5,000 and 15,000 was held in support of the new government, and demanding the resignation of the Crimean parliament; attendees waved Ukrainian, Tatar, and European Union flags.[102] Meanwhile, in Sevastopol, thousands protested against the new Ukrainian government, voted to establish a parallel administration, and created civil defence squads with the support of the Russian Night Wolves motorcycle club. Protesters waved Russian flags, chanted "Putin is our president!" and said they would refuse to further pay taxes to the Ukrainian state.[103][104] Russian military convoys were also alleged to be seen in the area.[104]

In Kerch, pro-Russian protesters attempted to remove the Ukrainian flag from atop city hall and replace it with the flag of Russia. Over 200 attended, waving Russian, orange-and-black St. George, and the Russian Unity party flags. Mayor Oleh Osadchy attempted to disperse the crowd and police eventually arrived to defend the flag. The mayor said "This is the territory of Ukraine, Crimea. Here's a flag of Crimea," but was accused of treason and a fight ensued over the flagpole.[105] On 24 February, more rallied outside the Sevastopol city state administration.[106] Pro-Russian demonstrators accompanied by neo-Cossacks demanded the election of a Russian citizen as mayor and hoisted Russian flags around the city administration; they also handed out leaflets to sign up for a self-defence militia, warning that the "Blue-Brown Europlague is knocking".[107]

Volodymyr Yatsuba, head of Sevastopol administration, announced his resignation, citing the "decision of the city's inhabitants" made at a pro-Russian rally, and while caretaker city administration initially leaned towards recognition of new Ukrainian government,[108] continued pressure from pro-Russian activists forced local authorities to concede.[109] Consequently, Sevastopol City Council illegally elected Alexei Chaly, a Russian citizen, as mayor. Under the law of Ukraine, it was not possible for Sevastopol to elect a mayor, as the Chairman of the Sevastopol City State Administration, appointed by the President of Ukraine, functions as its mayor.[110] A thousand protesters present chanted "A Russian mayor for a Russian city".[111]

On 25 February, several hundred pro-Russian protesters blocked the Crimean parliament demanding non-recognition of the central government of Ukraine and a referendum on Crimea's status.[112][113][114] On the same day, crowds gathered again outside Sevastopol's city hall on Tuesday as rumours spread that security forces could arrest Chaly, but police chief Alexander Goncharov said that his officers would refuse to carry out "criminal orders" issued by Kyiv. Viktor Neganov, a Sevastopol-based adviser to the Internal Affairs Minister, condemned the events in the city as a coup. "Chaly represents the interests of the Kremlin which likely gave its tacit approval," he said. Sevastopol City State Administration chairman Vladimir Yatsuba was booed and heckled on 23 February, when he told a pro-Russian rally that Crimea was part of Ukraine. He resigned the next day.[111] In Simferopol, the Regional State Administration building was blockaded with hundreds of protesters, including neo-Cossacks, demanding a referendum of separation; the rally was organized by the Crimean Front.[115]

On 26 February, near the Verkhovna Rada of Crimea building, 4,000–5,000 Crimean Tatars and supporters of the Euromaidan-Crimea movement faced 600–700 supporters of pro-Russian organizations and the Russian Unity Party.[116] Tatars leaders organised the demonstration in order to block the sitting of the Crimean parliament which is "doing everything to execute plans of separation of Crimea from Ukraine".[117] Supreme Council Chairman Vladimir Konstantinov said that the Crimean parliament would not consider separation from Ukraine, and that earlier reports that parliament would hold a debate on the matter were provocations.[118][119] Tatars created self-defence groups, encouraged collaboration with Russians, Ukrainians, and people of other nationalities, and called for the protection of churches, mosques, synagogues, and other important sites.[120] By nightfall the Crimean Tatars had left; several hundred Russian Unity supporters rallied on.[121]

The new Ukrainian government's acting Internal Affairs Minister Arsen Avakov tasked Crimean law enforcement agencies not to provoke conflicts and to do whatever necessary to prevent clashes with pro-Russian forces; and he added "I think, that way – through a dialogue – we shall achieve much more than with standoffs".[122] New Security Service of Ukraine (SBU) chief Valentyn Nalyvaichenko requested that the United Nations provide around-the-clock monitoring of the security situation in Crimea.[123] Russian troops took control of the main route to Sevastopol on orders from Russian president Vladimir Putin. A military checkpoint, with a Russian flag and Russian military vehicles, was set up on the main highway between the city and Simferopol.[124]

Russian takeover

On 27 February, unmarked Russian forces with nationalist paramilitaries took over the Autonomous Republic of Crimea and Sevastopol, with Russian special forces[125] seizing the building of the Supreme Council of Crimea and the building of the Council of Ministers in Simferopol.[126] Russian flags were raised over these buildings[127] and barricades were erected outside them.[128] Pro-Russian forces also occupied several localities in Kherson Oblast on the Arabat Spit, which is geographically a part of Crimea.

Whilst the "little green men" were occupying the Crimean parliament building, the parliament held an emergency session.[129][130] It voted to terminate the Crimean government, and replace Prime Minister Anatolii Mohyliov with Sergey Aksyonov.[131] Aksyonov belonged to the Russian Unity party, which received 4% of the vote in the last election.[130] According to the Constitution of Ukraine, the Prime Minister of Crimea is appointed by the Supreme Council of Crimea in consultation with the President of Ukraine.[132][133] Both Aksyonov and speaker Vladimir Konstantinov stated that they viewed Viktor Yanukovych as the de jure president of Ukraine, through whom they were able to ask Russia for assistance.[134]

The parliament also voted to hold a referendum on greater autonomy set for 25 May. The troops had cut all of the building's communications, and took MPs' phones as they entered.[129][130] No independent journalists were allowed inside the building while the votes were taking place.[130] Some MPs said they were being threatened and that votes were cast for them and other MPs, even though they were not in the chamber.[130] Interfax-Ukraine reported "it is impossible to find out whether all the 64 members of the 100-member legislature who were registered as present at when the two decisions were voted on or whether someone else used the plastic voting cards of some of them" because due to the armed occupation of parliament it was unclear how many MPs were present.[135]

The head of parliament's information and analysis department, Olha Sulnikova, had phoned from inside the parliamentary building to journalists and had told them 61 of the registered 64 deputies had voted for the referendum resolution and 55 for the resolution to dismiss the government.[135] Donetsk People's Republic separatist Igor Girkin said in January 2015 that Crimean members of parliament were held at gunpoint, and were forced to support the annexation.[136] These actions were immediately declared illegal by the Ukrainian interim government.[137]

On the same day, more troops in unmarked uniforms, assisted this time by what appeared to be local Berkut riot police (as well as Russian troops from the 31st Separate Airborne Assault Brigade dressed in Berkut uniforms),[138] established security checkpoints on the Isthmus of Perekop and the Chonhar Peninsula, which separate Crimea from the Ukrainian mainland.[128][139][140][141][142] Within hours, Ukraine had been cut off from Crimea. Shortly afterwards, Ukrainian TV channels became unavailable for Crimean viewers, and some of them were replaced with Russian stations.

 
The blockade of military units of the Armed Forces of Ukraine during the capture of Crimea by Russia in February–March 2014

On 1 March 2014, Aksyonov said that he would exercise control of all Ukrainian military and security installations on the peninsula. He also asked Putin for "assistance in ensuring peace and tranquillity" in Crimea.[143] Putin promptly received authorisation from the Federation Council of Russia for a Russian military intervention in Ukraine until the "political-social situation in the country is normalized".[144][145] Putin's swift manoeuvre prompted protests of some Russian intelligentsia and demonstrations in Moscow against a Russian military campaign in Crimea. By 2 March, Russian troops moving from the country's naval base in Sevastopol and reinforced by troops, armour, and helicopters from mainland Russia exercised complete control over the Crimean Peninsula.[146][147][148] Russian troops operated in Crimea without insignia. On 3 March they blockaded Southern Naval Base.

On 4 March, Ukrainian General Staff said there were units of the 18th Motor Rifle Brigade, 31st Air Assault Brigade and 22nd Spetsnaz Brigade deployed and operating in Crimea, instead of Russian Black Sea Fleet personnel, which violated international agreements signed by Ukraine and Russia.[149][150] At a press conference on the same day, Russian president Vladimir Putin said that Russia had no plans to annex Crimea.[151] He also said that it had no plans to invade Ukraine, but that it might intervene if Russians in Ukraine were threatened.[151] This was part of a pattern of public denials of the ongoing Russian military operation.[151]

Numerous media reports and statements by the Ukrainian and foreign governments noted the identity of the unmarked troops as Russian soldiers, but Russian officials concealed the identity of their forces, claiming they were local "self-defence" units over whom they had no authority.[37] As late as 17 April, Russian foreign minister Sergey Lavrov said that there were no "excessive Russian troops" in Ukraine.[152] At the same press conference, Putin said of the peninsula that "only citizens themselves, in conditions of free expression of will and their security can determine their future".[153] Putin later acknowledged that he had ordered "work to bring Crimea back into Russia" as early as February.[38] He also acknowledged that in early March there were "secret opinion polls" held in Crimea, which, according to him, reported overwhelming popular support for Crimea's incorporation into Russia.[154]

Russia eventually admitted its troops' presence.[155] Defence Minister Sergey Shoygu said the country's military actions in Crimea were undertaken by forces of the Black Sea Fleet and were justified by "threat to lives of Crimean civilians" and danger of "takeover of Russian military infrastructure by extremists".[156][better source needed] Ukraine complained that by increasing its troop presence in Crimea, Russia violated the agreement under which it headquartered its Black Sea Fleet in Sevastopol[157] and violated the country's sovereignty.[158] The United States and United Kingdom accused Russia of breaking the terms of the Budapest Memorandum on Security Assurances, by which Russia, the US, and the UK had reaffirmed their obligation to refrain from the threat or use of force against the territorial integrity or political independence of Ukraine.[159] The Russian government said the Budapest Memorandum [160] did not apply due to "circumstances resulting from the action of internal political or socio-economic factors".[161] In March 2015, retired Russian Admiral Igor Kasatonov [ru] stated that according to his information the Russian troop deployment in Crimea included six helicopter landings and three landings of an IL-76 with 500 people.[162][163]

Legal issues

The obligations between Russia and Ukraine with regard to territorial integrity and the prohibition of the use of force are laid down in a number of multilateral or bilateral agreements to which Russia and Ukraine are signatories.[164][165][159][166]

Vladimir Putin said that Russian troops in the Crimean peninsula were aimed "to ensure proper conditions for the people of Crimea to be able to freely express their will,"[167] whilst Ukraine and other nations argue that such intervention is a violation of Ukraine's sovereignty.[158]

In the 1994 Budapest Memorandum on Security Assurances[160] Russia was among those who affirmed to respect the territorial integrity of Ukraine (including Crimea) and to refrain from the threat or use of force against the territorial integrity or political independence of Ukraine.[159][166] The 1997 Russian–Ukrainian Treaty on Friendship,[168] Cooperation, and Partnership again reaffirmed the inviolability of the borders between both states,[166] and required Russian forces in Crimea to respect the sovereignty of Ukraine, honor its legislation and not interfere in the internal affairs of the country.[169]

The Russian–Ukrainian Partition Treaty on the Status and Conditions of the Black Sea Fleet signed in 1997 and prolonged in 2010, determined the status of Russian military presence in Crimea and restricted their operations,[166] including requirement to show their "military identification cards" when crossing the international border and that operations beyond designated deployment sites was permitted only after coordination with Ukraine.[169] According to Ukraine usage of navigation stations and troop movements were improperly covered by the treaty and were violated many times as well as related court decisions. February's troop movements were in "complete disregard" of the treaty.[170][note 4]

 
"Little green men" and trucks after the seizure of Perevalne military base, 9 March 2014

According to the Constitution of Russia, the admission of new federal subjects is governed by federal constitutional law (art. 65.2).[172] Such a law was adopted in 2001, and it postulates that admission of a foreign state or its part into Russia shall be based on a mutual accord between the Russian Federation and the relevant state and shall take place pursuant to an international treaty between the two countries; moreover, it must be initiated by the state in question, not by its subdivision or by Russia.[173]

On 28 February 2014, Russian MP Sergey Mironov, along with other members of the Duma, introduced a bill to alter Russia's procedure for adding federal subjects. According to the bill, accession could be initiated by a subdivision of a country, provided that there is "absence of efficient sovereign state government in foreign state"; the request could be made either by subdivision bodies on their own or on the basis of a referendum held in the subdivision in accordance with corresponding national legislation.[174]

On 11 March 2014, both the Supreme Council of Crimea and the Sevastopol City Council adopted a declaration of independence, which stated their intent to declare independence and request full accession to Russia should the pro-Russian option receive the most votes during the scheduled status referendum. The declaration directly referred to the Kosovo independence precedent, by which the Albanian-populated Autonomous Province of Kosovo and Metohija declared independence from Russia's ally Serbia as the Republic of Kosovo in 2008—a unilateral action Russia staunchly opposed. Many analysts saw the Crimean declaration as an overt effort to pave the way for Crimea's annexation by Russia.[175]

Crimean authorities' stated plans to declare independence from Ukraine made the Mironov bill unnecessary. On 20 March 2014, two days after the treaty of accession was signed, the bill was withdrawn by its initiators.[176][non-primary source needed]

At its meeting on 21–22 March, the Council of Europe's Venice Commission stated that the Mironov bill violated "in particular, the principles of territorial integrity, national sovereignty, non-intervention in the internal affairs of another state and pacta sunt servanda" and was therefore incompatible with international law.[177][178]

Crimean status referendum

On 27 February 2014, following the takeover of its building by Russian special forces, the Supreme Council of Crimea voted to hold a referendum on 25 May, with the initial question as to whether Crimea should upgrade its autonomy within Ukraine.[179][non-primary source needed] The referendum date was later moved from 25 May to 30 March.[180] A Ukrainian court declared the referendum to be illegal.[181]

On 6 March, the Supreme Council moved the referendum date to 16 March and changed its scope to ask a new question: whether Crimea should apply to join Russia as a federal subject or restore the 1992 Crimean constitution within Ukraine, which the Ukrainian government had previously invalidated. This referendum, unlike one announced earlier, contained no option to maintain the status quo of governance under the 1998 constitution.[182] Ukraine's acting President, Oleksandr Turchynov, stated that "The authorities in Crimea are totally illegitimate, both the parliament and the government. They are forced to work under the barrel of a gun and all their decisions are dictated by fear and are illegal".[183]

On 14 March, the Crimean status referendum was deemed unconstitutional by the Constitutional Court of Ukraine,[184] and a day later, the Verkhovna Rada formally dissolved the Crimean parliament.[36] With a referendum looming, Russia massed troops near the Ukrainian eastern border,[185] likely to threaten escalation and stymie Ukraine's response.

The referendum was held despite the opposition from the Ukrainian government. Official results reported about 95.5% of participating voters in Crimea (turnout was 83%) were in favour of seceding from Ukraine and joining Russia.[46][186][187] The results of referendum were questioned;[188] another report by Evgeny Bobrov, a member of the Russian President's Human Rights Council, suggested the official results were inflated and only 15% to 30% of Crimeans eligible to vote actually voted for the Russian option.[35][189][190]

The means by which the referendum was conducted were widely criticised by foreign governments[191] and in the Ukrainian and international press, with reports that anyone holding a Russian passport regardless of residency in Crimea was allowed to vote.[192] OSCE refused to send observers to the referendum, stating that invitation should have come from an OSCE member state in question (i.e. Ukraine), rather than local authorities.[193] Russia invited a group of observers from various European far-right political parties aligned with Putin, who stated the referendum was conducted in a free and fair manner.[194][195]

Proclamations of independence of the Republic of Crimea

The Republic of Crimea was short lived. On 17 March, following the official announcement of the referendum results, the Supreme Council of Crimea declared the formal independence of the Republic of Crimea, comprising the territories of both the Autonomous Republic of Crimea and the city of Sevastopol, which was granted special status within the breakaway republic.[196] The Crimean parliament declared the "partial repeal" of Ukrainian laws and began nationalising private and Ukrainian state property located on the Crimean Peninsula, including Ukrainian ports[197] and property of Chornomornaftogaz.[198] Parliament also formally requested that the Russian government admit the breakaway republic into Russia,[199] with Sevastopol asking to be admitted as a "city of federal significance".[200] On the same day, the de facto Supreme Council renamed itself the State Council of Crimea,[201] declared the Russian ruble an official currency alongside the hryvnia,[202] and in June the Russian ruble became the only form of legal tender.[203]

Putin officially recognised the Republic of Crimea 'as a sovereign and independent state' by decree on 17 March.[204][205]

On 21 March the Republic of Crimea became a federal Subject of Russia.

Accession treaty and finalization of the annexation

 
President Putin with Vladimir Konstantinov, Sergey Aksyonov and Alexey Chaly at the Kremlin, 18 March 2014

The Treaty on Accession of the Republic of Crimea to Russia was signed between representatives of the Republic of Crimea (including Sevastopol, with which the rest of Crimea briefly unified) and the Russian Federation on 18 March 2014 to lay out terms for the immediate admission of the Republic of Crimea and Sevastopol as federal subjects of Russia and part of the Russian Federation.[206][207][note 5] On 19 March, the Russian Constitutional Court decided that the treaty is in compliance with the Constitution of Russia.[209] The treaty was ratified by the Federal Assembly and Federation Council by 21 March.[210] A Just Russia's Ilya Ponomarev was the only State Duma member to vote against the treaty.[211] The Republic of Crimea and the federal city of Sevastopol became the 84th and 85th federal subjects of Russia.[212]

During a controversial incident in Simferopol on 18 March, some Ukrainian sources said that armed gunmen that were reported to be Russian special forces allegedly stormed the base. This was contested by Russian authorities, who subsequently announced the arrest of an alleged Ukrainian sniper in connection with the killings,[213] but later denied the arrest had occurred.[214]

The two casualties had a joint funeral attended by both the Crimean and Ukrainian authorities, and both the Ukrainian soldier and Russian paramilitary "self-defence volunteer" were mourned together.[215] As of March 2014 the incident was under investigation by both the Crimean authorities and the Ukrainian military.[216][217]

In response to shooting, Ukraine's then acting defense minister Ihor Tenyukh authorised Ukrainian troops stationed in Crimea to use deadly force in life-threatening situations. This increased the risk of bloodshed during any takeover of Ukrainian military installations, yet the ensuing Russian operations to seize the remaining Ukrainian military bases and ships in Crimea did not bring new fatalities, although weapons were used and several people were injured. The Russian units involved in such operations were ordered to avoid usage of deadly force when possible. Morale among the Ukrainian troops, which for three weeks were blockaded inside their compounds without any assistance from the Ukrainian government, was very low, and the vast majority of them did not offer any real resistance.[218]

On 24 March, the Ukrainian government ordered the full withdrawal of all of its armed forces from Crimea.[219] Approximately 50% of the Ukrainian soldiers in Crimea had defected to the Russian military.[220][221] On 26 March the last Ukrainian military bases and Ukrainian Navy ships were captured by Russian troops.[222]

Occupation

 
May Day parade in Simferopol, 1 May 2019.

On 27 March, the United Nations General Assembly adopted a non-binding resolution, which declared the Crimean referendum and subsequent status change invalid, by a vote of 100 to 11, with 58 abstentions and 24 absent.[223][224]

Crimea and Sevastopol switched to Moscow Time at 10 p.m. on 29 March.[225][226]

On 31 March, Russia unilaterally denounced the Kharkiv Pact[227] and Partition Treaty on the Status and Conditions of the Black Sea Fleet.[228] Putin cited "the accession of the Republic of Crimea and Sevastopol into Russia" and resulting "practical end of renting relationships" as his reason for the denunciation.[229] On the same day, he signed a decree formally rehabilitating the Crimean Tatars, who were ousted from their lands in 1944, and the Armenian, German, Greek, and Bulgarian minority communities in the region that Stalin also ordered removed in the 1940s.

Also on 31 March 2014, the Russian Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev announced a series of programmes aimed at swiftly incorporating the territory of Crimea into Russia's economy and infrastructure. Medvedev announced the creation of a new ministry for Crimean affairs, and ordered Russia's top ministers who joined him there to make coming up with a development plan their top priority.[230] On 3 April 2014, the Republic of Crimea and the city of Sevastopol became parts of Russia's Southern Military District.[citation needed] On 7 May 2015, Crimea switched its phone code system from the Ukrainian number system to the Russian number system.[231]

On 11 April, the Constitution of the Republic of Crimea and City Charter of Sevastopol were adopted by their respective legislatures,[232][233] coming into effect the following day in addition the new federal subjects were enumerated in a newly published revision of the Russian Constitution.[234][235]

On 14 April, Vladimir Putin announced that he would open a ruble-only account with Bank Rossiya and would make it the primary bank in the newly annexed Crimea as well as giving the right to service payments on Russia's $36 billion wholesale electricity market – which gave the bank $112 million annually from commission charges alone.[236]

 
Crimea (dark green), Rest of Ukraine (light green) and Russia (light red) in Europe

Russia withdrew its forces from southern Kherson in December 2014.[237]

In July 2015, Russian Prime Minister, Dmitry Medvedev, declared that Crimea had been fully integrated into Russia.[238] Until 2016 these new subjects were grouped in the Crimean Federal District.

On 8 August 2016, Ukraine reported that Russia had increased its military presence along the demarcation line.[239] In response to this military buildup Ukraine also deployed more troops and resources closer to the border with Crimea.[240] The Pentagon has downplayed a Russian invasion of Ukraine, calling Russian troops along the border a regular military exercise.[241] On 10 August, Russia claimed two servicemen were killed in clashes with Ukrainian commandos, and that Ukrainian servicemen had been captured with a total of 40 kg of explosives in their possession.[242] Ukraine denied that the incident took place.[243]

Russian accounts claimed that Russian FSB detained "Ukrainian saboteurs" and "terrorists" near Armiansk. The ensuing gunfight left one FSB officer and a suspect dead. A number of individuals were detained, including Yevhen Panov, who is described by Russian sources as a Ukrainian military intelligence officer and leader of the sabotage group. The group was allegedly planning terror attacks on important infrastructure in Armiansk, Crimea.[244][245]

Ukrainian media reported that Panov was a military volunteer fighting in the east of the country, however he has more recently been associated with a charitable organization. Russia also claimed that the alleged border infiltration was accompanied by "heavy fire" from Ukrainian territory, resulting in the death of a Russian soldier.[244][245] The Ukrainian government called the Russian accusations "cynical" and "senseless" and argued that since Crimea was Ukrainian territory, it was Russia which "has been generously financing and actively supporting terrorism on Ukrainian territory".[246]

 
A pro-war propaganda event in Sevastopol, Crimea, 29 April 2022

In 2017, a survey performed by the Centre for East European and International Studies showed that 85% of the non-Crimean Tatar respondents believed that if the referendum would be held again it would lead to the same or "only marginally different" results. Crimea was fully integrated into the Russian media sphere, and links with the rest of Ukraine were hardly existent.[247][248]

On 26 November 2018, lawmakers in the Ukraine Parliament overwhelmingly backed the imposition of martial law along Ukraine's coastal regions and those bordering Russia in response to the firing upon and seizure of Ukrainian naval ships by Russia near the Crimean peninsula a day earlier. A total of 276 lawmakers in Kyiv backed the measure, which took effect on 28 November 2018 and was ended on 26 December.[249][250]

On 28 December 2018, Russia completed a high-tech security fence marking the de facto border between Crimea and Ukraine.[251]

In 2021, Ukraine launched the Crimea Platform, a diplomatic initiative aimed at protecting the rights of Crimean inhabitants and ultimately reversing the annexation of Crimea.[252]

Transition and aftermath

Economic implications

Initially after the annexation, salaries rose, especially those of government workers[citation needed]. This was soon offset by the increase in prices caused by the depreciation of the ruble. Wages were cut back by 30% to 70% after Russian authority became established[citation needed]. Tourism, previously Crimea's main industry, suffered in particular, down by 50% from 2014 in 2015.[253][254] Crimean agricultural yields were also significantly impacted by the annexation[citation needed]. Ukraine cut off supplies of water through the North Crimean Canal, which supplies 85% of Crimea's fresh water, causing the 2014 rice crop to fail, and greatly damaging the maize and soybean crops.[255] The annexation had a negative influence on Russians working in Ukraine and Ukrainians working in Russia.[256]

The number of tourists visiting Crimea in the 2014 season was lower than in the previous years due to a combination of "Western sanctions", ethical objections by Ukrainians, and the difficulty of getting there for Russians.[257] The Russian government attempted to stimulate the flow of tourists by subsidizing holidays in the peninsula for children and state workers from all Russia[258][259][better source needed] which worked mostly for state-owned hotels. In 2015, overall 3 million tourists visited Crimea according to official data, while before annexation it was around 5.5 million on average. The shortage is attributed mostly to stopped flow of tourists from Ukraine. Hotels and restaurants are also experiencing problems with finding enough seasonal workers, who were most arriving from Ukraine in the preceding years. Tourists visiting state-owned hotels were complaining mostly about low standard of rooms and facilities, some of them still unrepaired from Soviet times.[260]

According to the German newspaper Die Welt, the annexation of Crimea is economically disadvantageous for the Russian Federation. Russia will have to spend billions of euros a year to pay salaries and pensions. Moreover, Russia will have to undertake costly projects to connect Crimea to the Russian water supply and power system because Crimea has no land connection to Russia and at present (2014) gets water, gas and electricity from mainland Ukraine. This required building a bridge and a pipeline across the Kerch Strait. Also, Novinite claims that a Ukrainian expert told Die Welt that Crimea "will not be able to attract tourists".[261]

The then first Deputy to Minister of Finance of Russian Federation Tatyana Nesterenko said that the decision to annex Crimea was made by Vladimir Putin exclusively, without consulting Russia's Finance Ministry.[262]

The Russian business newspaper Kommersant expresses an opinion that Russia will not acquire anything economically from "accessing" Crimea, which is not very developed industrially, having just a few big factories, and whose yearly gross product is only $4 billion. The newspaper also says that everything from Russia will have to be delivered by sea, higher costs of transportation will result in higher prices for everything, and to avoid a decline in living standards Russia will have to subsidise Crimean people for a few months. In total, Kommersant estimates the costs of integrating Crimea into Russia in $30 billion over the next decade, i.e. $3 billion per year.[263]

Western oil experts[who?]estimate that Russia's seizing of Crimea, and the associated control of an area of Black Sea more than three times its land area gives it access to oil and gas reserves potentially worth trillions of dollars.[264] It also deprives Ukraine of its chances of energy independence. Moscow's acquisition may alter the route along which the South Stream pipeline would be built, saving Russia money, time and engineering challenges[citation needed]. It would also allow Russia to avoid building in Turkish territorial waters, which was necessary in the original route to avoid Ukrainian territory.[265] This pipeline was later canceled in favour of TurkStream, however.

 
Vladimir Putin and his close confidant Arkady Rotenberg before the opening of the Crimean Bridge in May 2018

The Russian Federal Service for Communications (Roskomnadzor) warned about a transition period as Russian operators have to change the numbering capacity and subscribers. Country code will be replaced from the Ukrainian +380 to Russian +7. Codes in Crimea start with 65, but in the area of "7" the 6 is given to Kazakhstan which shares former Soviet Union +7 with Russia, so city codes have to change. The regulator assigned 869 dialling code to Sevastopol and the rest of the peninsula received a 365 code.[266] At the time of the unification with Russia, telephone operators and Internet service providers in Crimea and Sevastopol are connected to the outside world through the territory of Ukraine.[267] Minister of Communications of Russia, Nikolai Nikiforov announced on his Twitter account that postal codes in Crimea will now have six-figures: to the existing five-digit number the number two will be added at the beginning. For example, the Simferopol postal code 95000 will become 295000.[268]

In the area that now forms the border between Crimea and Ukraine mining the salt lake inlets from the sea that constitute the natural borders, and in the spit of land left over stretches of no-man's-land with wire on either side was created.[269] On early June that year Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev signed a Government resolution No.961[270] dated 5 June 2014 establishing air, sea, road and railway checkpoints. The adopted decisions create a legal basis for the functioning of a checkpoint system at the Russian state border in the Republic of Crimea and Sevastopol.[271][third-party source needed]

In the year following the annexation, armed men seized various Crimean businesses, including banks, hotels, shipyards, farms, gas stations, a bakery, a dairy, and Yalta Film Studio.[272][273][274] Russian media have noted this trend as "returning to the 90's," which is perceived as a period of anarchy and rule of gangs in Russia.[275]

After 2014 the Russian government invested heavily in the peninsula's infrastructure—repairing roads, modernizing hospitals and building the Crimean Bridge that links the peninsula to the Russian mainland. Development of new sources of water was undertaken, with huge difficulties, to replace closed Ukrainian sources.[276] In 2015, the Investigative Committee of Russia announced a number of theft and corruption cases in infrastructure projects in Crimea, for example; spending that exceeded the actual accounted costs by a factor of three. A number of Russian officials were also arrested for corruption, including head of federal tax inspection.[277]

(According to February 2016 official Ukrainian figures) after Russia's annexation 10% of Security Service of Ukraine personnel left Crimea; accompanied by 6,000 of the pre-annexation 20,300 people strong Ukrainian army.[278]

As result of the disputed political status of Crimea, Russian mobile operators never expanded their operations into Crimea and all mobile services are offered on the basis of "internal roaming," which caused significant controversy inside Russia. Telecoms however argued that expanding coverage to Crimea will put them at risk of Western sanctions and, as result, they will lose access to key equipment and software, none of which is produced locally.[279][280]

The first five years of Crimean occupation cost Russia over $20 billion, roughly equal to two years of Russia's entire education budget.[281]

Human rights situation

According to the United Nations and multiple NGOs, Russia is responsible for multiple human rights abuses, including torture, arbitrary detention, forced disappearances and instances of discrimination, including persecution of Crimean Tatars in Crimea since the illegal annexation.[282][283] The UN Human Rights Office has documented multiple human rights violations in Crimea. Noting that minority Crimean Tatars have been disproportionately affected.[284][285] In December 2016, the UN General Assembly voted on a resolution on human rights in occupied Crimea. It called on the Russian Federation "to take all measures necessary to bring an immediate end to all abuses against residents of Crimea, in particular reported discriminatory measures and practices, arbitrary detentions, torture and other cruel, inhumane or degrading treatment, and to revoke all discriminatory legislation". It also urged Russia to "immediately release Ukrainian citizens who were unlawfully detained and judged without regard for elementary standards of justice".[286]

After the annexation, Russian authorities banned Crimean Tatar organizations, filed criminal charges against Tatar leaders and journalists, and targeted the Tatar population. The Atlantic Council have described this as the practice of collective punishment, and therefore as a war crime prohibited under international humanitarian law and Geneva convention.[287][better source needed]

In March 2014, Human Rights Watch reported that pro-Ukrainian activists and journalists had been attacked, abducted, and tortured by "self-defense" groups.[288] Some Crimeans were simply "disappeared" with no explanation.[289]

On 9 May 2014, the new "anti-extremist" amendment to the Criminal Code of Russia, passed in December 2013, came into force. Article 280.1 designated incitement of violation of territorial integrity of the Russian Federation[290] (incl. calls for secession of Crimea from Russia[291]) as a criminal offense in Russia, punishable by a fine of 300 thousand roubles or imprisonment up to 3 years. If such statements are made in public media or the internet, the punishment could be obligatory works up to 480 hours or imprisonment up to five years.[290]

According to a report released on the Russian government-run President of Russia's Council on Civil Society and Human Rights website, Tatars who were opposed to Russian rule have been persecuted, Russian law restricting freedom of speech has been imposed, and the new Russian authorities "liquidated" the Kyiv Patriarchate Orthodox church on the peninsula.[292][35] The Crimean Tatar television station was also shut down by the Russian authorities.[289]

 
Russian President Putin meeting with representatives of the Crimean Tatars, 16 May 2014

On 16 May the new Russian authorities of Crimea issued a ban on the annual commemorations of the anniversary of the deportation of the Crimean Tatars by Stalin in 1944, citing "possibility of provocation by extremists" as a reason.[293] Previously, when Crimea was controlled by Ukraine, these commemorations had taken place every year. The Russian-installed Crimean authorities also banned Mustafa Dzhemilev, a human rights activist, Soviet dissident, member of the Ukrainian parliament, and former Chairman of the Mejlis of the Crimean Tatars from entering Crimea.[294] Additionally, Mejlis reported, that officers of Russia's Federal Security Service (FSB) raided Tatar homes in the same week, on the pretense of "suspicion of terrorist activity".[295] The Tatar community eventually did hold commemorative rallies in defiance of the ban.[294][295] In response Russian authorities flew helicopters over the rallies in an attempt to disrupt them.[296]

In May 2015, a local activist, Alexander Kostenko, was sentenced to four years in a penal colony. His lawyer, Dmitry Sotnikov, said that the case was fabricated and that his client had been beaten and starved. Crimean prosecutor Natalia Poklonskaya accused Kostenko of making Nazi gestures during the Maidan protests, and that they were judging "not just [Kostenko], but the very idea of fascism and Nazism, which are trying to raise their head once again". Sotnikov responded that "There are fabricated cases in Russia, but rarely such humiliation and physical harm. A living person is being tortured for a political idea, to be able to boast winning over fascism".[297] In June 2015, Razom released a report compiling human rights abuses in Crimea.[298][299] In its 2016 annual report, the Council of Europe made no mention of human rights abuses in Crimea because Russia had not allowed its monitors to enter.[300]

In February 2016 human rights defender Emir-Usein Kuku from Crimea was arrested and accused of belonging to the Islamist organization Hizb ut-Tahrir although he denies any involvement in this organization. Amnesty International has called for his immediate release.[301][302]

On 24 May 2014 Ervin Ibragimov, a former member of the Bakhchysarai Town Council and a member of the World Congress of Crimean Tatars went missing. CCTV footage from a camera at a nearby shop documents that Ibragimov had been stopped by a group of men and that he is briefly speaking to the men before being forced in their van.[303] According to the Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group Russian authorities refuse to investigate the disappearance of Ibragimov.[304]

In May 2018 Server Mustafayev, the founder and coordinator of the human rights movement Crimean Solidarity was imprisoned by Russian authorities and charged with "membership of a terrorist organisation". Amnesty International and Front Line Defenders demand his immediate release.[305][306]

On 12 June 2018, Ukraine lodged a memorandum weighing about 90 kg, consisting of 17,500 pages of text in 29 volumes to the UN's International Court of Justice about racial discrimination by Russian authorities in occupied Crimea and state financing of terrorism by Russian Federation in Donbas.[307][308]

Between 2015 and 2019 over 134,000 people living in Crimea applied for and were issued Ukrainian passports.[309]

Crimean public opinion

 
Concert to mark the fifth anniversary of annexation in Simferopol, Crimea, 18 March 2019

Prior to Russian occupation, support for joining Russia was 23% in a 2013 poll, down from 33% in 2011.[310] A joint survey by American government agency Broadcasting Board of Governors and polling firm Gallup was taken during April 2014.[311] It polled 500 residents of Crimea. The survey found that 82.8% of those polled believed that the results of the Crimean status referendum reflected the views of most residents of Crimea, whereas 6.7% said that it did not. 73.9% of those polled said that they thought that the annexation would have a positive impact on their lives, whereas 5.5% said that it would not. 13.6% said that they did not know.[311]

A comprehensive poll released on 8 May 2014 by the Pew Research Centre surveyed local opinions on the annexation.[312] Despite international criticism of 16 March referendum on Crimean status, 91% of those Crimeans polled thought that the vote was free and fair, and 88% said that the Ukrainian government should recognise the results.[312]

In a survey completed in 2019 by a Russian company FOM 72% of surveyed Crimean residents said their lives have improved since annexation. At the same time only 39% Russians living in the mainland said the annexation was beneficial for the country as a whole which marks a significant drop from 67% in 2015.[313]

Whilst the Russian government actively cited local opinion polls to argue that the annexation was legitimate (i.e. supported by the population of the territory in question),[314][315] some authors have cautioned against using surveys concerning identities and support for the annexation conducted in "oppressive political environment" of Russian-held Crimea.[316][317]

Ukrainian response

Immediately after the treaty of accession was signed in March, the Ukrainian Ministry of Foreign Affairs summoned the Provisional Principal of Russia in Ukraine to present note verbale of protest against Russia's recognition of the Republic of Crimea and its subsequent annexation.[318] Two days later, the Verkhovna Rada condemned the treaty[319] and called Russia's actions "a gross violation of international law". The Rada called on the international community to avoid recognition of the "so-called Republic of Crimea" or the annexation of Crimea and Sevastopol by Russia as new federal subjects.

On 15 April 2014, the Verkhovna Rada declared the Autonomous Republic of Crimea and Sevastopol to be under "provisional occupation" by the Russian military[320] and imposed travel restrictions on Ukrainians visiting Crimea.[321] The territories were also deemed "inalienable parts of Ukraine" subject to Ukrainian law. Among other things, the special law approved by the Rada restricted foreign citizens' movements to and from the Crimean Peninsula and forbade certain types of entrepreneurship.[322] The law also forbade activity of government bodies formed in violation of Ukrainian law and designated their acts as null and void.[323][better source needed]

 
Following Russia's annexation of Crimea, Ukraine blocked the North Crimean Canal, which provided 85% of Crimea's drinking water.[324]

Ukrainian authorities greatly reduced the volume of water flowing into Crimea via the North Crimean Canal due to huge debt for water supplied in the previous year, threatening the viability of the peninsula's agricultural crops, which are heavily dependent on irrigation.[325][326]

The Ukrainian National Council for TV and Radio Broadcasting instructed all cable operators on 11 March 2014 to stop transmitting a number of Russian channels, including the international versions of the main state-controlled stations, Russia-1, Channel One and NTV, as well as news channel Russia-24.[327]

In March 2014, activists began organising flash mobs in supermarkets to urge customers not to buy Russian goods and to boycott Russian gas stations, banks, and concerts. In April 2014, some cinemas in Kyiv, Lviv, and Odesa began shunning Russian films.[328]

On 2 December 2014, Ukraine created a Ministry of Information Policy, with one of its goals being, according to first Minister of Information, Yuriy Stets, to counteract "Russian information aggression".[329]

In December 2014, Ukraine halted all train and bus services to Crimea.[330]

On 16 September 2015 the Ukrainian parliament voted for the law that sets 20 February 2014 as the official date of the Russian temporary occupation of Crimean peninsula.[331][332] On 7 October 2015 the President of Ukraine signed the law into force.[333]

The Ministry of Temporarily Occupied Territories and IDPs was established by the Ukrainian government on 20 April 2016 to manage occupied parts of Donetsk, Luhansk and Crimea regions affected by Russian military intervention of 2014.[334] By 2015, the number of IDPs registered in Ukraine who had fled from Russian-occupied Crimea was 50,000.[335]

Russian response

 
At least 30,000 people at 15 March protests, named March of Peace, which took place in Moscow a day before the Crimean referendum.

In a poll published on 24 February 2014 by the state-owned Russian Public Opinion Research Center, only 15% of those Russians polled said 'yes' to the question: "Should Russia react to the overthrow of the legally elected authorities in Ukraine?"[336]

The State Duma Committee on Commonwealth of Independent States Affairs, headed by Leonid Slutsky, visited Simferopol on 25 February 2014 and said: "If the parliament of the Crimean autonomy or its residents express the wish to join the Russian Federation, Russia will be prepared to consider this sort of application. We will be examining the situation and doing so fast".[337] They also stated that in the event of a referendum for the Crimea region joining the Russian Federation, they would consider its results "very fast".[338] Later Slutsky announced that he was misunderstood by the Crimean press, and no decision regarding simplifying the process of acquiring Russian citizenship for people in Crimea had been made yet.[339] He also added that if "fellow Russian citizens are in jeopardy, you understand that we do not stay away".[340] On 25 February, in a meeting with Crimean politicians, he stated that Viktor Yanukovych was still the legitimate president of Ukraine.[341] That same day, the Russian Duma announced it was determining measures so that Russians in Ukraine who "did not want to break from the Russian World" could acquire Russian citizenship.[342]

On 26 February, Russian President Vladimir Putin ordered the Russian Armed Forces to be "put on alert in the Western Military District as well as units stationed with the 2nd Army Central Military District Command involved in aerospace defence, airborne troops and long-range military transport". Despite media speculation that this was in reaction to the events in Ukraine, Russian Defence Minister Sergei Shoigu said it was for reasons separate from the unrest in Ukraine.[343] On 27 February 2014, the Russian government dismissed accusations that it was in violation of the basic agreements regarding the Black Sea Fleet: "All movements of armored vehicles are undertaken in full compliance with the basic agreements and did not require any approvals".[344]

On 27 February, the Russian governing agencies presented the new law project on granting citizenship.[345]

The Russian Ministry of Foreign Affairs called on the West and particularly NATO to "abandon the provocative statements and respect the neutral status of Ukraine".[346] In its statement, the ministry claims that the agreement on settlement of the crisis, which was signed on 21 February and was witnessed by foreign ministries from Germany, Poland and France had to this date, not been implemented[346] (Vladimir Lukin from Russia had not signed it[347]).

On 28 February, according to ITAR-TASS, the Russian Ministry of Transport discontinued further talks with Ukraine in regards to the Crimean Bridge project.[348] However, on 3 March Dmitry Medvedev, then Prime Minister of Russia, signed a decree creating a subsidiary of Russian Highways (Avtodor) to build a bridge at an unspecified location along the Kerch Strait.[349][350][351]

On Russian social networks, there was a movement to gather volunteers who served in the Russian army to go to Ukraine.[352]

On 28 February, President Putin stated in telephone calls with key EU leaders that it was of "extreme importance of not allowing a further escalation of violence and the necessity of a rapid normalisation of the situation in Ukraine".[353] Already on 19 February the Russian Ministry of Foreign Affairs had referred to the Euromaidan revolution as the "Brown revolution".[354][355]

In Moscow, on 2 March, an estimated 27,000 rallied in support of the Russian government's decision to intervene in Ukraine.[356] The rallies received considerable attention on Russian state TV and were officially approved by the government.[356]

Meanwhile, on 1 March, five people who were picketing next to the Federation Council building against the invasion of Ukraine were arrested.[357] The next day about 200 people protested at the building of the Russian Ministry of Defence in Moscow against Russian military involvement.[358] About 500 people also gathered to protest on the Manezhnaya Square in Moscow, and the same number of people on the Saint Isaac's Square in Saint Petersburg.[359] On 2 March, about eleven protesters demonstrated in Yekaterinburg against Russian involvement, with some wrapped in the Ukrainian flag.[360] Protests were also held in Chelyabinsk on the same day.[361] Opposition to the military intervention was also expressed by rock musician Andrey Makarevich, who wrote in particular: "You want war with Ukraine? It will not be the way it was with Abkhazia: the folks on the Maidan have been hardened and know what they are fighting for – for their country, their independence. ... We have to live with them. Still neighborly. And preferably in friendship. But it's up to them how they want to live".[362] The Professor of the Department of Philosophy at the Moscow State Institute of International Relations Andrey Zubov was fired for his article in Vedomosti, criticising Russian military intervention.[363]

On 2 March, one Moscow resident protested against Russian intervention by holding a "Stop the war" banner, but he was immediately harassed by passers-by. Police then proceeded to arrest him. A woman came forward with a fabricated charge against him, of beating up a child; however, her claim, due to lack of a victim and obviously false, was ignored by the police.[364] Andrei Zubov, a professor at the Moscow State Institute of International Relations, who compared Russian actions in Crimea to the 1938 Annexation of Austria by Nazi Germany, was threatened. Alexander Chuyev, the leader of the pro-Kremlin Spravedlivaya Rossiya party, also objected to Russian intervention in Ukraine. Boris Akunin, a popular Russian writer, predicted that Russia's moves would lead to political and economic isolation.[364]

 
Russian President Vladimir Putin (seated, middle) speaks to the press on 4 March 2014, denouncing the Revolution of Dignity as an "unconstitutional coup", and insisting that Moscow has a right to protect Russians in Ukraine.[365]

President Putin's approval rating among the Russian public increased by nearly 10% since the crisis began, up to 71.6%, the highest in three years, according to a poll conducted by the All-Russian Center for Public Opinion Research, released on 19 March.[366][367] Additionally, the same poll showed that more than 90% of Russians supported unification with the Crimean Republic.[366] According to a 2021 study in the American Political Science Review, "three quarters of those who rallied to Putin after Russia annexed Crimea were engaging in at least some form of dissembling and that this rallying developed as a rapid cascade, with social media joining television in fueling perceptions this was socially desirable".[368]

On 4 March, at a press conference in Novo-Ogaryovo, President Putin expressed his view on the situation that if a revolution took place in Ukraine, it would be a new country with which Russia had not concluded any treaties.[369] He offered an analogy with the events of 1917 in Russia, when as a result of the revolution the Russian Empire fell apart and a new state was created.[369] However, he stated Ukraine would still have to honour its debts.

 
Around 100,000 people gathered in Crimean Sevastopol at Victory Day parade

Russian politicians speculated that there were already 143,000 Ukrainian refugees in Russia.[370] The Ukrainian Ministry of Foreign Affairs refuted those claims of refugee increases in Russia.[371] At a briefing on 4 March 2014, the director of the department of information policy of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Ukraine Yevhen Perebiynis said that Russia was misinforming its own citizens as well as the entire international community to justify its own actions in the Crimea.[372]

On 5 March, an anchor of the Russian-controlled TV channel RT America, Abby Martin, criticized her employer's biased coverage of the military invervention.[373][374] Also on 5 March 2014, another RT America anchor, Liz Wahl, of the network's Washington, DC bureau, resigned on air, explaining that she could not be "part of a network that whitewashes the actions of Putin" and citing her Hungarian ancestry and the memory of the Soviet repression of the Hungarian Uprising as a factor in her decision.[375]

In early March, Igor Andreyev, a 75-year-old survivor of the Siege of Leningrad, attended an anti-war rally against the Russian intervention in Crimea and was holding a sign that read "Peace to the World". The riot police arrested him, and a local pro-government lawyer then accused him of being a supporter of "fascism". The retiree, who lived on a 6,500-ruble monthly pension, was fined 10,000 rubles.[376]

Prominent dissident Mikhail Khodorkovsky said that Crimea should stay within Ukraine with broader autonomy.[377]

Tatarstan, a republic within Russia populated by Volga Tatars, has sought to alleviate concerns about the treatment of Tatars by Russia, as Tatarstan is a gas-rich and economically successful republic in Russia.[378] On 5 March, President of Tatarstan Rustam Minnikhanov signed an agreement on co-operation between Tatarstan and the Aksyonov government in Crimea that implied collaboration between ten government institutions as well as significant financial aid to Crimea from Tatarstan businesses.[378] On 11 March, Minnikhanov was in Crimea on his second visit and attended as a guest in the Crimean parliament chamber during the vote on the declaration of sovereignty pending 16 March referendum.[378] The Tatarstan's Mufti Kamil Samigullin invited Crimean Tatars to study in madrasas in Kazan, and declared support for their "brothers in faith and blood".[378] Mustafa Dzhemilev, a former leader of the Crimean Tatar Majlis, believed that forces that were suspected to be Russian forces should leave the Crimean peninsula,[378] and asked the UN Security Council to send peacekeepers into the region.[379]

 
Hotel in Kerch, Crimea, 2015

On 15 March, thousands of protesters (estimates varying from 3,000 by official sources up to 50,000 claimed by the opposition) in Moscow marched against Russian involvement in Ukraine, many waving Ukrainian flags.[380] At the same time, a pro-government (and pro-referendum) rally occurred across the street, counting in the thousands as well (officials claiming 27,000 with the opposition claiming about 10,000).

In February 2015, the leading independent Russian newspaper Novaya Gazeta obtained documents,[381] allegedly written by oligarch Konstantin Malofeev and others, which provided the Russian government with a strategy in the event of Viktor Yanukovych's removal from power and the break-up of Ukraine, which were considered likely. The documents outline plans for annexation of Crimea and the eastern portions of the country, closely describing the events that actually followed after Yanukovych's fall. The documents also describe plans for a public relations campaign that would seek to justify Russian actions.[382][383][384]

In June 2015 Mikhail Kasyanov stated that all Russian Duma decisions on Crimea annexation were illegal from the international point of view and the annexation was provoked by false accusations of discrimination of Russian nationals in Ukraine.[385]

As of January 2019, Arkady Rotenberg through his Stroygazmontazh LLC and his companies building the Crimean Bridge along with Nikolai Shamalov and Yuri Kovalchuk through their Rossiya Bank have become the most important investors in Russia's development of the annexed Crimea.[386]

International response

 
International reaction to the 2014 Crimean crisis according to official governmental statements.[note 6]
  Condemnation of Russian actions as a military intervention or invasion
  Condemnation of Russian actions
  Support for Ukrainian territorial integrity
  Statements only voicing concern or hope for peaceful resolution to the conflict
  Recognition of Russian interests
  Support for Russian actions and/or condemnation of the Ukrainian interim government

  Ukraine
  Russia
  No official statements / No data available

There have been a range of international reactions to the annexation. In March 2014, the UN General Assembly passed a non-binding resolution 100 in favour, 11 against and 58 abstentions in the 193-nation assembly that declared Crimea's Moscow-backed referendum invalid.[387] In a move supported by the Lithuanian President,[388] the United States government imposed sanctions against persons they deem to have violated or assisted in the violation of Ukraine's sovereignty.[389] The European Union suspended talks with Russia on economic and visa-related matters, and is considering more stringent sanctions against Russia in the near future, including asset freezes.[390][391] while Japan announced sanctions which include suspension of talks relating to military, space, investment, and visa requirements.[392] The United Kingdom qualified the referendum vote in Crimea of being "farcical", "illegal" and "illegitimate".[393]

Ukraine and other countries claim that Russia has signed a number of treaties guaranteeing Ukrainian territorial integrity. These include the 1991 Belavezha Accords that established the Commonwealth of Independent States, the 1975 Helsinki Accords, the 1994 Budapest Memorandum on Security Assurances[394] and the 1997 Treaty on friendship, cooperation and partnership between the Russian Federation and Ukraine.[164][165][395]

The European Commission decided on 11 March 2014 to enter into a full free-trade agreement with Ukraine within the year.[396] On 12 March, the European Parliament rejected the upcoming referendum on independence in Crimea, which they saw as manipulated and contrary to international and Ukrainian law.[397] The G7 bloc of developed nations (the G8 minus Russia) made a joint statement condemning Russia and announced that they would suspend preparations for the planned G8 summit in Sochi in June.[398][399] NATO condemned Russia's military escalation in Crimea and stated that it was a breach of international law[400] while the Council of Europe expressed its full support for the territorial integrity and national unity of Ukraine.[401] The Visegrád Group has issued a joint statement urging Russia to respect Ukraine's territorial integrity and for Ukraine to take into account its minority groups to not further break fragile relations. It has urged for Russia to respect Ukrainian and international law and in line with the provisions of the 1994 Budapest Memorandum.[402]

China said "We respect the independence, sovereignty and territorial integrity of Ukraine". A spokesman restated China's belief of non-interference in the internal affairs of other nations and urged dialogue.[403][404]

The Indian government called for a peaceful resolution of the situation.[405] Both Syria and Venezuela openly support Russian military action. Syrian President Bashar al-Assad said that he supports Putin's efforts to "restore security and stability in the friendly country of Ukraine", while Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro condemned Ukraine's "ultra-nationalist" coup.[406][407] Sri Lanka described Yanukovych's removal as unconstitutional and considered Russia's concerns in Crimea as justified.[408]

Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk called for a change in EU energy policy as Germany's dependence on Russian gas poses risks for Europe.[409]

On 13 March 2014, German Chancellor Angela Merkel warned the Russian government it risks massive damage to Russia, economically and politically, if it refuses to change course on Ukraine,[410] though close economic links between Germany and Russia significantly reduce the scope for any sanctions.[411]

After Russia moved to formally incorporate Crimea, some worried whether it may do the same in other regions.[412] US deputy national security advisor Tony Blinken said that the Russian troops massed on the eastern Ukrainian border may be preparing to enter the country's eastern regions. Russian officials stated that Russian troops would not enter other areas.[412] US Air Force Gen. Philip M. Breedlove, NATO's supreme allied commander in Europe, warned that the same troops were in a position to take over the separatist Russian-speaking Moldovan province of Transnistria.[412] President of Moldova Nicolae Timofti warned Russia with not attempting to do this to avoid damaging its international status further.[413][414]

On 9 April, the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe deprived Russia of voting rights.[415]

On 14 August, while visiting Crimea, Vladimir Putin ruled out pushing beyond Crimea. He undertook to do everything he could to end the conflict in Ukraine, saying Russia needed to build calmly and with dignity, not by confrontation and war which isolated it from the rest of the world.[416]

United Nations resolutions

 
UN Security Council vote on a draft resolution condemning the 2014 Crimean referendum.
  Voted in favour of the resolution
  Abstained
  Vetoed the resolution
 
UN General Assembly vote on the resolution condemning the 2014 Crimean referendum.
  In favour of considering the referendum illegal
  Abstained
  Absent when the vote took place
  Against adopting the resolution

On 15 March 2014, a US-sponsored resolution that went to a vote in the UN Security Council to reaffirm that council's commitment to Ukraine's "sovereignty, independence, unity and territorial integrity" was not approved. Though a total of 13 council members voted in favour of the resolution and China abstained, Russia vetoed the resolution.[417]

On 27 March 2014, the UN General Assembly approved a resolution describing the referendum leading to annexation of Crimea by Russia as illegal.[418] The draft resolution, which was titled "Territorial integrity of Ukraine", was co-sponsored by Canada, Costa Rica, Germany, Lithuania, Poland, Ukraine and the US. It affirmed the council's commitment to the "sovereignty, political independence, unity and territorial integrity of Ukraine within its internationally recognised borders". The resolution tried to underscore that 16 March referendum held in Crimea and the city of Sevastopol has no validity and cannot form the basis for any alteration of the status of the Autonomous Republic of Crimea or of the city of Sevastopol. The resolution got 100 votes in its favour, while 11 nations voted against and 58 countries abstained from the vote. The resolution was non-binding and the vote was largely symbolic.[419]

Since 2014, the UN General Assembly has voted several times, most recently in December 2019,[420] to affirm Ukraine's territorial integrity, condemn the 'temporary occupation' of Crimea, and reaffirm nonrecognition of its annexation.[420]

International recognition

Afghanistan, Cuba, North Korea, Kyrgyzstan, Nicaragua, Sudan, Syria, and Zimbabwe have recognised the result of the 2014 referendum in Crimea.[421]

Four non-UN member states recognised the results of the referendum: Abkhazia, South Ossetia, Artsakh and Transnistria. The Transnistrian foreign minister, Nina Shtanski, recognized Crimea's annexation by Russia.[422] Transnistria sent a request on 18 March 2014 to join the Russian Federation following the Crimean example and in compliance with the Admission Law provisions.[423][424][425] The regional councils of Italy's northern regions Lombardy, Liguria and Veneto adopted a non-binding resolution on recognizing Crimea as part of Russia, but they revoked it in 2022 after Russia invaded Ukraine.[426][427]

Sanctions

 
Ukrainian checkpoint at Kalanchak, entering Kherson Oblast from Russian-occupied Crimea.

Sanctions were imposed to prevent officials and politicians from travelling to Canada, the United States, or the European Union. They were the most wide-ranging applied to Russia since the fall of the Soviet Union.[428][429]

Japan announced milder sanctions than the US and EU. These include suspension of talks relating to military, space, investment, and visa requirements.[430]

In response to the sanctions introduced by the US and EU, the Russian Duma unanimously passed a resolution asking for all members of the Duma to be included on the sanctions list.[431] Head of the Just Russia party Sergei Mironov said he was proud of being included on the sanctions list: "It is with pride that I have found myself on the black list, this means they have noticed my stance on Crimea".[432] Russian companies started pulling billions of dollars out of Western banks to avoid having their asset frozen.[433]

Three days after the lists were published, the Russian Foreign Ministry published a reciprocal sanctions list of US citizens, which consisted of 10 names, including House Speaker John Boehner, Senator John McCain, and two advisers to President Obama. The ministry said in a statement: "We have repeatedly warned that sanctions are a double-edged instrument and would hit the United States like a boomerang".[388] Several of those sanctioned responded with pride at their inclusion on the list, including John Boehner,[434] John McCain,[434] Bob Menendez,[435] Dan Coats,[434] Mary Landrieu, and Harry Reid.[436]

On 24 March, Russia imposed retaliatory sanctions on 13 Canadian officials including members of the Parliament of Canada,[437] banning them from entering Russia. Foreign Affairs Minister John Baird, said the sanctions were "a badge of honour".[438] Former Minister of Justice Irwin Cotler also said that he considered the sanctions a badge of honour, not a mark of exclusion.[437]

"The good news is that so far, Russia has shown no inclination to use the Northern Distribution Network as leverage in the wake of US retaliation for its troop movements in Crimea".[439]

Expanded Western sanctions in mid-March coursed through financial markets, hitting the business interests of some of Russia's richest people. Jack Farchy; Neil Hume (21 March 2014). "Russian share prices drop as sanctions bite". Financial Times. Retrieved 21 March 2014. The Americans centred on the heart of Moscow's leadership,

  • Neil Buckley (21 March 2014). "Putin feels the heat as sanctions target president's inner circle". Financial Times. Retrieved 21 March 2014.</ref>

|title=Russia Staring at Recession on Sanctions That Could Get Tougher |url=https://www.bloomberg.com/news/2014-03-23/russia-staring-at-recession-on-sanctions-that-could-get-tougher.htmlhough the EU's initial list shied fromx}}</ref> Russian banks warned of a sanctions-induced recession,[440] the country braced for capital outflows for the first three months of 2014 to reach $70 billion,[441] more than the entirety of outflows for 2013,[442] and Russian government-bond issues plummeted by three-quarters compared with the same period the previous year.[443] Novatek, Russia's second-largest gas producer, saw $2.5bn in market value wiped out when its shares sank by nearly 10%, rendering Putin's close friend Gennady Timchenko, who has a 23% stake in the company, $575m poorer.[444] "I do hope that there is some serious diplomatic activity going on behind the scenes," said one Russian banker,[445] though others were more sanguine on the question of whether the sanctions would have any enduring effect,[446][447] and Russians, top and bottom, seemed defiant.[448] The official Russian response was mixed.[449]

The then Minister of Economic Development of the Russian Federation Alexey Ulyukaev said that introduction of sectoral sanctions will lead to a serious decline of the Russian economy: economic growth of Russia will become seriously negative, the growth of volumes of investment will be even more negative, inflation will rise, and government revenues and reserves will go down.[450]

As well as differences between the United States and Europe as a whole as to how to respond to the Russian-backed incursion, those same differences have played out among Eastern European countries.[451]

A number of Russian citizens reported that they have been denied European visas after they visited Crimea after annexation.[452] A Russian consumer protection watchdog OZPP published a warning for Russian tourists about this risk, explaining that from the international law point of view, Crimea is an occupied territory, after which Roskomnadzor blocked the OZPP website "for threatening territorial integrity of Russian Federation".[453]

In response to having its voting rights revoked, Russia in June 2017 suspended its budget payments to the Council of Europe, with Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov stating payments would not resume until all rights of Russia's delegation were fully restored.[454] Council Secretary General Thorbjørn Jagland has suggested lifting the sanctions to avoid the impact of mounting budgetary restraints. However, Council members such as Ukraine and its supporters have argued that readmitting Russia without demanding concessions in return would amount to "caving to Russian 'blackmail'".[455][456]

Mapping

 
Location of the Crimea Federal District within Russia in 2014.
  • The United Nations maps Crimea as belonging to Ukraine.[457]
  • National Geographic Society stated that their policy is "to portray current reality" and "Crimea, if it is formally annexed by Russia, would be shaded gray", but also further remarked that this step does not suggest recognising the legitimacy of such.[458] As of April 2014, Crimea was still displayed as part of Ukraine.[459]
  • As of April 2014, Google Maps displays Crimea as a disputed territory to most viewers.[459] For the Russian and Ukrainian versions of the website, Crimea is marked as belonging to the corresponding country (Russia or Ukraine respectively).[459] Google stated that it "work(s) with sources to get the best interpretation of the border or claim lines".[460]
  • Yandex displays Crimea as part of Russia for .ru and .com domains since the end of March 2014.[461] According to the official statement, the company works with users from different countries and "displays reality that surrounds them".[462]
  • As of March 2014, Bing Maps,[463] OpenStreetMap and HERE displayed Crimea as belonging to Ukraine.[459] In particular, OpenStreetMap requested its users to refrain from editing borders and administrative relations of subdivisions located in the Autonomous Republic of Crimea and Sevastopol until 31 May 2014.[459] On 5 June 2014, OpenStreetMap switched to a territorial dispute option, displaying Crimea as a disputed territory belonging to both countries.[464]
  • In 2015, on the PepsiCo website, a Russian-language map was visible for a few days that depicted Crimea as a part of Russia.[465]
  • The 2016 edition of a French atlas published by Larousse shows Crimea as part of Russian territory: Oleh Shamshur, Ukrainian Ambassador to France, expressed shock.[466] Shortly after, Larousse changed the map to reflect Crimea as part of Ukraine on the Atlas on their internet version.[467] [468]
  • The Italian-language magazine of geopolitics Limes maps Crimea as a part of Russia since December 2015.[469] Following protests from the Ukrainian embassy in Italy, the magazine editor Lucio Caracciolo wrote that "the map reflects reality. When Crimea and Sevastopol will be back under effective Ukrainian sovereignty, we will produce a map that reflects such reality".[470]
  • The Russian version of Apple's App Store began to show Crimea as part of Russia on 27 November 2019.[471]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ There remain "some contradictions and inherent problems" regarding the date on which the occupation began.[1] Ukraine considers 20 February 2014 to be "the beginning of the temporary occupation of Crimea and Sevastopol by Russia", citing the timeframe inscribed on the Russian medal "For the Return of Crimea";[2] in 2015, the Ukrainian parliament officially designated the date as such.[3] In early March 2015, Russian president Vladimir Putin stated in a film about the annexation of Crimea that he ordered the operation to "restore" Crimea to Russia following an all-night emergency meeting on 22 to 23 February 2014.[1][4][5] In 2018, the Russian foreign minister claimed that the earlier "start date" on the medal was due to a "technical misunderstanding".[6]
  2. ^ It also noted that "certain politicians, local government officials, leaders of civil society organizations, and radically inclined individuals have attempted to create grounds for escalating the civil conflict, and have spread autonomous and separatist attitudes among the people, which could lead to the demise of our as a united nation and loss of its national sovereignty." In addition, the statement said that certain lawmakers of every level have begun separatist negotiations with representatives of foreign nations. "Open consultations are being held on the possible division of the country into separate parts in violation of the Ukrainian constitution," read the statement. "This could lead to an escalation of conflict between different sectors of society, inciting ethnic or religious hatred and military conflict."[96]
  3. ^ The date was given by Putin in Russian film commemorating the annexation of Crimea, however, the inscription on the Medal "For the Return of Crimea", awarded by the Russian Ministry of Defence state put 20 February as the starting date
  4. ^ Dilanian (2014) on 3 March, "CIA director John Brennan told a senior lawmaker Monday that a 1997 treaty between Russia and Ukraine allows up to 25,000 Russia troops in the vital Crimea region, so Russia may not consider its recent troop movements to be an invasion, U.S. officials said."[171]
  5. ^ The treaty between Russia and pro-Russian Aksyonov government of Crimea, signed on that date, specified that Crimea would be considered incorporated into Russia since the date of signing. The document entered into force on 1 April 2014,[208] but pending that was applied provisionally since very signing.[208]
  6. ^ If an official position can be sorted in more than one category, the "strongest" position was marked (from the "call for a peaceful resolution" to "interpretation as a military intervention" consecutively). For the sources see the image description.

References

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  2. ^ "7683rd meeting of the United Nations Security Council. Thursday, 28 April 2016, 3 p.m. New York". Mr. Prystaiko (Ukraine): ... In that regard, I have to remind the Council that the official medal that was produced by the Russian Federation for the so-called return of Crimea has the dates on it, starting with 20 February, which is the day before that agreement was brought to the attention of the Security Council by the representative of the Russian Federation. Therefore, the Russian Federation started – not just planned, but started – the annexation of Crimea the day before we reached the first agreement and while President Yanukovych was still in power.
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  31. ^ Lessons from Russia’s Operations in Crimea and Eastern Ukraine, page 19, published by RAND Corporation in 2017. "Ukraine’s government was in transition following the ouster of Yanukovych. As a result, it did not react to the Russian operation when launched. Russia’s task was made relatively easy by the confusion and chaos that generally follows an uprising, such as what happened in Kyiv. Moscow capitalized on the tensions and uncertainty in Crimea, as well as on the inexperience of Ukraine’s provisional government. Meeting notes of the discussion among Ukrainian leadership reveal a great deal of anxiety, uncertainty, and unwillingness to take action for fear of escalation."
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annexation, crimea, russian, federation, more, details, russian, occupation, crimea, february, march, 2014, russia, invaded, crimean, peninsula, part, ukraine, then, annexed, this, took, place, relative, power, vacuum, immediately, following, revolution, digni. For more details see Russian occupation of Crimea In February and March 2014 Russia invaded the Crimean Peninsula part of Ukraine and then annexed it This took place in the relative power vacuum 31 immediately following the Revolution of Dignity and was the first act of the wider Russo Ukrainian War Annexation of Crimea by the Russian FederationPart of the Russo Ukrainian WarRussian President Vladimir Putin signs the treaty of accession annexation with Crimean leaders in Moscow 18 March 2014 Date20 February note 1 26 March 2014 7 1 month and 6 days LocationCrimeaResultFormal annexation of Crimea by Russia on 18 March illegal under international law Russia suspended from the G8 8 International sanctions imposed on Russia Belligerents Russia UkraineCommanders and leadersVladimir PutinDmitry MedvedevSergey ShoyguValery GerasimovAleksandr VitkoOleg BelaventsevAlexey DyuminSergey AksyonovVladimir KonstantinovViktor PshonkaRustam TemirgalievAlexey ChalyOleksandr TurchynovArseniy YatsenyukIhor TenyukhMykhailo KutsynSerhiy HaydukArsen AvakovValentyn NalyvaichenkoAndriy ParubiyAnatolii MohyliovSerhiy KunitsynRefat ChubarovMustafa DzhemilevUnits involvedBased in Crimea elements of 9 11 12 Navy 510th Naval Inf Bde Feodosiia 810th Naval Inf Bde Simferopol Deployed to Crimea elements ofGround Forces 18th Mot Rifle Bde Grozny 291st Artillery Bde Troitskaya GRU command 3rd Spetsnaz Bde Tolyatti 10th Spetsnaz Bde Krasnodar 16th Spetsnaz Bde Tambov 22nd Spetsnaz Bde Stepnoy 25th Spetsnaz Rgt Stavropol 45th Spetsnaz Rgt Kubinka Moscow Airborne 7th Air Assault Div Novorossiysk 31st Air Assault Bde Ulyanovsk Navy 382nd Naval Inf Bn Temryuk 727th Naval Inf Bn Astrakhan Special Operations Forces SOF Command Prokhladny Armed forces 9 11 12 Navy 36th Coastal Def Bde at Perevalne 1st Naval Inf Bn Feodosiia 56th Gds Bn Sevastopol 501st Naval Inf Bn Kerch 406th Artillery Bde Simferopol 37th Comms and Control Rgt Sevastopol ParamilitaryInterior troops 9th Bde Simferopol 15th Bn Yevpatoriia 18th Spec Mot Militia Bn Haspra 42nd Operational Rgt Sevastopol 47th Bde Feodosiia Border guards Special Purpose Border Guard Bn Yalta StrengthProtesters 20 000 Sevastopol 10 11 10 000 Simferopol 12 Volunteer units 11 13 5 000 Sevastopol 1 700 Simferopol Russian military forces 20 000 30 000 troops 14 Protesters 4 000 10 000 Simferopol 15 16 Ukrainian military forces 5 000 22 000 troops 17 18 40 000 reservists partly mobilised outside Crimea 19 Casualties and losses1 Crimean SDF trooper killed 20 2 soldiers killed 21 60 80 soldiers detained 22 9 268 military servicemen and 7 050 civilian employees defected 23 24 2 civilian deaths during the protests 25 26 1 civilian killed 27 28 by Crimean SDF under command of a former Russian serviceman 29 30 The events in Kyiv that ousted Ukrainian president Viktor Yanukovych on 22 February 2014 sparked pro Russian demonstrations as of 23 February against the incoming Ukrainian government At the same time Russian president Vladimir Putin discussed Ukrainian events with security service chiefs remarking that we must start working on returning Crimea to Russia On 27 February Russian troops 32 seized strategic sites across Crimea 33 34 followed by the installation of the pro Russian Aksyonov government in Crimea the Crimean status referendum and the declaration of Crimea s independence on 16 March 2014 35 36 Although Russia initially claimed their military was not involved in the events 37 Putin later admitted that troops were deployed to stand behind Crimea s self defence forces 38 Russia formally incorporated Crimea on 18 March 2014 39 38 Following the annexation 40 Russia escalated its military presence on the peninsula and made threats to solidify the new status quo on the ground 41 Ukraine and many other countries condemned the annexation and consider it to be a violation of international law and Russian agreements safeguarding the territorial integrity of Ukraine The annexation led to the other members of the G8 suspending Russia from the group 42 and introducing sanctions The United Nations General Assembly also rejected the referendum and annexation adopting a resolution affirming the territorial integrity of Ukraine within its internationally recognised borders 43 44 and referring to the Russian action as a temporary occupation 45 The Russian government opposes the annexation label with Putin defending the referendum as complying with the principle of the self determination of peoples 46 47 Contents 1 Other names 1 1 In Ukraine 1 2 In Russia 2 Background 2 1 Euromaidan and the Revolution of Dignity 3 Annexation 3 1 Russian invasion of Crimea 3 2 Russian takeover 3 3 Legal issues 3 4 Crimean status referendum 3 5 Proclamations of independence of the Republic of Crimea 3 6 Accession treaty and finalization of the annexation 3 7 Occupation 4 Transition and aftermath 4 1 Economic implications 4 2 Human rights situation 4 3 Crimean public opinion 5 Ukrainian response 6 Russian response 7 International response 7 1 United Nations resolutions 7 2 International recognition 7 3 Sanctions 7 4 Mapping 8 See also 9 Notes 10 References 11 Further reading 12 External linksOther namesIn Ukraine The names of the Crimean annexation vary In Ukraine the annexation is known as the Temporary occupation of the Autonomous Republic of Crimea and Sevastopol by Russia Ukrainian Timchasova okupaciya Avtonomnoyi Respubliki Krim i Sevastopolya Rosiyeyu romanized Tymchasova okupatsiia Avtonomnoi Respubliky Krym i Sevastopolia Rosiieiu the illegal occupation of the Autonomous Republic of Crimea the fall of Crimea and the invasion of Crimea 48 49 50 51 In Russia In the Russian Federation it is also known as the accession of Crimea to the Russian Federation Russian Prisoedinenie Kryma k Rossijskoj Federacii romanized Prisoyedineniye Kryma k Rossiyskoy Federatsii the return of Crimea Russian Vozvrashenie Kryma romanized Vosvrashchenie Kryma and the reunification of Crimea 52 53 BackgroundMain articles 2014 pro Russian unrest in Ukraine and Historical background of the 2014 pro Russian unrest in Ukraine See also 1954 transfer of Crimea Crimea in the Soviet Union and Annexation of Crimea by the Russian Empire nbsp Euromaidan in Kyiv 11 December 2013Crimea was part of the Crimean Khanate from 1441 until it was annexed by the Russian Empire in 1783 After the end of the empire in the first stages of the Russian Civil War there were a series of short lived independent governments Crimean People s Republic Crimean Regional Government Crimean SSR They were followed by White Russian governments General Command of the Armed Forces of South Russia and later South Russian Government In October 1921 the Bolshevik Russian SFSR gained control of the peninsula and instituted the Crimean Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic Moscow joined the RSFSR with three other republics to form the Soviet Union the following year After the Second World War and the 1944 deportation of all of the indigenous Crimean Tatars by the Soviet government the Crimean ASSR was stripped of its autonomy in 1946 and downgraded to the status of an oblast of the Russian SFSR In 1954 the Crimean Oblast was transferred from the Russian SFSR to the Ukrainian SSR by decree of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the Soviet Union to commemorate the 300th anniversary of Ukraine s union with Russia 54 55 In 1989 under Gorbachev s perestroika 56 the Supreme Soviet declared that the deportation of the Crimean Tatars under Stalin had been illegal 57 and the mostly Muslim ethnic group was allowed to return to Crimea 58 In 1990 the Soviet of the Crimean Oblast proposed the restoration of the Crimean ASSR 59 The oblast conducted a referendum in 1991 which asked whether Crimea should be elevated into a signatory of the New Union Treaty that is become a union republic on its own By that time though the dissolution of the Soviet Union was well underway The Crimean ASSR was restored for less than a year as part of Ukrainian SSR before the restoration of Ukrainian independence 60 Newly independent Ukraine maintained Crimea s autonomous status 61 while the Supreme Council of Crimea affirmed the peninsula s sovereignty as a part of Ukraine 62 63 Ukrainian authorities limited Crimean autonomy in 1995 64 65 clarification needed During the 1990s the dispute over control of the Black Sea Fleet and Crimean naval facilities were source of tensions between Russia and Ukraine In 1992 Vladimir Lukin then chairman of the Russian parliament s Committee on Foreign Affairs suggested that in order to pressure Ukraine to give up its claim to the Black Sea Fleet Russia should question Ukrainian control over Crimea 66 In 1998 the Partition Treaty divided the fleet and gave Russia a naval base in Sevastopol and the Treaty of Friendship recognized the inviolability of existing borders However in 2003 Tuzla Island conflict issues over maritime border resurfaced In September 2008 the Ukrainian Foreign Minister Volodymyr Ohryzko accused Russia of giving Russian passports to the population in Crimea and described it as a real problem given Russia s declared policy of military intervention abroad to protect Russian citizens 67 On 24 August 2009 anti Ukrainian demonstrations were held in Crimea by ethnic Russian residents Sergei Tsekov of the Russian Bloc 68 and then deputy speaker of the Crimean parliament 69 said then that he hoped that Russia would treat Crimea the same way as it had treated South Ossetia and Abkhazia 70 Crimea is populated by an ethnic Russian majority and a minority of both ethnic Ukrainians and Crimean Tatars and thus demographically possessed one of Ukraine s largest ethnically Russian populations 71 As early as in 2010 some analysts already speculated that the Russian government had irredentist plans Taras Kuzio said that Russia has an even more impossible time recognizing Ukraine s sovereignty over the Crimea and the port of Sevastopol as seen by public opinion in Russia statements by politicians including members of the ruling United Russia party experts and journalists 72 In 2011 William Varettoni wrote that Russia wants to annex Crimea and is merely waiting for the right opportunity most likely under the pretense of defending Russian brethren abroad 73 Euromaidan and the Revolution of Dignity Main articles Euromaidan and Revolution of Dignity The Euromaidan protest movement began in Kyiv in late November 2013 after President Viktor Yanukovych of the Party of Regions failed to sign the Ukraine European Union Association Agreement 74 due to failure of Ukrainian Supreme Council Rada to pass promised required legislation 75 76 77 Yanukovych won 78 the 2010 presidential election with strong support from voters in the Autonomous Republic of Crimea and southern and eastern Ukraine The Crimean autonomous government strongly supported Yanukovych and condemned the protests saying they were threatening political stability in the country The Crimean autonomous parliament said that it supported the government s decision to suspend negotiations on the pending association agreement and urged Crimeans to strengthen friendly ties with Russian regions 79 80 81 On 4 February 2014 the Presidium of the Supreme Council considered holding a referendum on the peninsula s status and asked the Russian government to guarantee the vote 82 83 The Security Service of Ukraine SBU responded by opening a criminal case to investigate the possible subversion of Ukraine s territorial integrity 84 On 20 February 2014 during a visit to Moscow Chairman of the Supreme Council of Crimea Vladimir Konstantinov stated that the 1954 transfer of Crimea from the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic to the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic had been a mistake 82 The Euromaidan protests came to a head in late February 2014 and Yanukovych and many of his ministers fled the capital on 22 February 85 After his flight opposition parties and defectors from the Party of Regions put together a parliamentary quorum in the Verkhovna Rada the Ukrainian parliament and voted on 22 February to remove Yanukovych from his post on the grounds that he was unable to fulfill his duties 86 although this legislative removal lacked the required three quarter vote of sitting Rada members according to the constitution in effect at the time which the Rada also voted to suspend 87 88 89 Arseniy Yatsenyuk was appointed by the Rada to serve as the head of a caretaker government until new presidential and parliament elections could be held This new government was recognised internationally though the Russian government said that these events had been a coup d etat and that the caretaker government was illegitimate 90 91 AnnexationSee also Anti Maidan and Russo Ukrainian War Further information Timeline of the annexation of Crimea by the Russian Federation Russian invasion of Crimea nbsp Crimean self defence forces 2 March 2014 nbsp A pro Ukrainian demonstration in Simferopol Ukrainian flag on the left Crimean Tatar flag on the right during the Russian military intervention in Crimea 9 March 2014 nbsp Medal of the Russian Defense Ministry For the return of Crimea Russian Za vozvrashenie Kryma 20 February 18 March 2014The February 2014 revolution of Dignity that ousted Ukrainian president Viktor Yanukovych sparked a political crisis in Crimea which initially manifested as demonstrations against the new interim Ukrainian government 92 but rapidly escalated In January 2014 the Sevastopol city council had already called for formation of people s militia units to ensure firm defence of the city from extremism 93 94 One of the initial Russian disinformation stories was the false allegation of a Corsun Pogrom which claimed that pro Maidan Ukrainians stopped several buses with Anti Maidan protesters on 20 February Russian media sources described beating and humiliation among the protesters while a fake news documentary claimed multiple tortured and killed people No such event actually occurred and when human rights organizations tried to contact the producers of the documentary they found that no such organization existed Human rights group attributed the fake story to pro Kremlin trolls 95 The Verkhovna Rada of Crimea members called for an extraordinary meeting on 21 February In response to Russian separatist sentiment the Security Service of Ukraine SBU said that it would use severe measures to prevent any action taken against diminishing the territorial integrity and sovereignty of Ukraine note 2 clarification needed The party with the largest number of seats in the Crimean parliament 80 of 100 the Party of Regions of Ukrainian president Viktor Yanukovych did not discuss Crimean secession and were supportive of an agreement between President Yanukovych 78 and Euromaidan activists to end the unrest that was struck on the same day in Kyiv 97 98 Russia was concerned that the new government avowedly committed to closer relations with the West put its strategic positions in Crimea at risk On 22 23 February note 3 Russian President Vladimir Putin 99 convened an all night meeting with security services chiefs to discuss extrication of the deposed Ukrainian president Viktor Yanukovych and at the end of that meeting Putin had remarked that we must start working on returning Crimea to Russia 4 5 After that GRU and FSB began negotiating deals with local sympathizers to ensure that when the operation began there would be well armed local self defense groups on the streets for support 9 11 On 23 February pro Russian demonstrations were held in the Crimean city of Sevastopol Crimean prime minister Anatolii Mohyliov said that his government recognised the new provisional government in Kyiv and that the Crimean autonomous government would carry out all laws passed by the Ukrainian parliament 100 In Simferopol following a pro Russian demonstration the previous day where protesters had replaced the Ukrainian flag over the parliament with a Russian flag 101 a pro Euromaidan rally of between 5 000 and 15 000 was held in support of the new government and demanding the resignation of the Crimean parliament attendees waved Ukrainian Tatar and European Union flags 102 Meanwhile in Sevastopol thousands protested against the new Ukrainian government voted to establish a parallel administration and created civil defence squads with the support of the Russian Night Wolves motorcycle club Protesters waved Russian flags chanted Putin is our president and said they would refuse to further pay taxes to the Ukrainian state 103 104 Russian military convoys were also alleged to be seen in the area 104 In Kerch pro Russian protesters attempted to remove the Ukrainian flag from atop city hall and replace it with the flag of Russia Over 200 attended waving Russian orange and black St George and the Russian Unity party flags Mayor Oleh Osadchy attempted to disperse the crowd and police eventually arrived to defend the flag The mayor said This is the territory of Ukraine Crimea Here s a flag of Crimea but was accused of treason and a fight ensued over the flagpole 105 On 24 February more rallied outside the Sevastopol city state administration 106 Pro Russian demonstrators accompanied by neo Cossacks demanded the election of a Russian citizen as mayor and hoisted Russian flags around the city administration they also handed out leaflets to sign up for a self defence militia warning that the Blue Brown Europlague is knocking 107 Volodymyr Yatsuba head of Sevastopol administration announced his resignation citing the decision of the city s inhabitants made at a pro Russian rally and while caretaker city administration initially leaned towards recognition of new Ukrainian government 108 continued pressure from pro Russian activists forced local authorities to concede 109 Consequently Sevastopol City Council illegally elected Alexei Chaly a Russian citizen as mayor Under the law of Ukraine it was not possible for Sevastopol to elect a mayor as the Chairman of the Sevastopol City State Administration appointed by the President of Ukraine functions as its mayor 110 A thousand protesters present chanted A Russian mayor for a Russian city 111 On 25 February several hundred pro Russian protesters blocked the Crimean parliament demanding non recognition of the central government of Ukraine and a referendum on Crimea s status 112 113 114 On the same day crowds gathered again outside Sevastopol s city hall on Tuesday as rumours spread that security forces could arrest Chaly but police chief Alexander Goncharov said that his officers would refuse to carry out criminal orders issued by Kyiv Viktor Neganov a Sevastopol based adviser to the Internal Affairs Minister condemned the events in the city as a coup Chaly represents the interests of the Kremlin which likely gave its tacit approval he said Sevastopol City State Administration chairman Vladimir Yatsuba was booed and heckled on 23 February when he told a pro Russian rally that Crimea was part of Ukraine He resigned the next day 111 In Simferopol the Regional State Administration building was blockaded with hundreds of protesters including neo Cossacks demanding a referendum of separation the rally was organized by the Crimean Front 115 On 26 February near the Verkhovna Rada of Crimea building 4 000 5 000 Crimean Tatars and supporters of the Euromaidan Crimea movement faced 600 700 supporters of pro Russian organizations and the Russian Unity Party 116 Tatars leaders organised the demonstration in order to block the sitting of the Crimean parliament which is doing everything to execute plans of separation of Crimea from Ukraine 117 Supreme Council Chairman Vladimir Konstantinov said that the Crimean parliament would not consider separation from Ukraine and that earlier reports that parliament would hold a debate on the matter were provocations 118 119 Tatars created self defence groups encouraged collaboration with Russians Ukrainians and people of other nationalities and called for the protection of churches mosques synagogues and other important sites 120 By nightfall the Crimean Tatars had left several hundred Russian Unity supporters rallied on 121 The new Ukrainian government s acting Internal Affairs Minister Arsen Avakov tasked Crimean law enforcement agencies not to provoke conflicts and to do whatever necessary to prevent clashes with pro Russian forces and he added I think that way through a dialogue we shall achieve much more than with standoffs 122 New Security Service of Ukraine SBU chief Valentyn Nalyvaichenko requested that the United Nations provide around the clock monitoring of the security situation in Crimea 123 Russian troops took control of the main route to Sevastopol on orders from Russian president Vladimir Putin A military checkpoint with a Russian flag and Russian military vehicles was set up on the main highway between the city and Simferopol 124 Russian takeover On 27 February unmarked Russian forces with nationalist paramilitaries took over the Autonomous Republic of Crimea and Sevastopol with Russian special forces 125 seizing the building of the Supreme Council of Crimea and the building of the Council of Ministers in Simferopol 126 Russian flags were raised over these buildings 127 and barricades were erected outside them 128 Pro Russian forces also occupied several localities in Kherson Oblast on the Arabat Spit which is geographically a part of Crimea Whilst the little green men were occupying the Crimean parliament building the parliament held an emergency session 129 130 It voted to terminate the Crimean government and replace Prime Minister Anatolii Mohyliov with Sergey Aksyonov 131 Aksyonov belonged to the Russian Unity party which received 4 of the vote in the last election 130 According to the Constitution of Ukraine the Prime Minister of Crimea is appointed by the Supreme Council of Crimea in consultation with the President of Ukraine 132 133 Both Aksyonov and speaker Vladimir Konstantinov stated that they viewed Viktor Yanukovych as the de jure president of Ukraine through whom they were able to ask Russia for assistance 134 The parliament also voted to hold a referendum on greater autonomy set for 25 May The troops had cut all of the building s communications and took MPs phones as they entered 129 130 No independent journalists were allowed inside the building while the votes were taking place 130 Some MPs said they were being threatened and that votes were cast for them and other MPs even though they were not in the chamber 130 Interfax Ukraine reported it is impossible to find out whether all the 64 members of the 100 member legislature who were registered as present at when the two decisions were voted on or whether someone else used the plastic voting cards of some of them because due to the armed occupation of parliament it was unclear how many MPs were present 135 The head of parliament s information and analysis department Olha Sulnikova had phoned from inside the parliamentary building to journalists and had told them 61 of the registered 64 deputies had voted for the referendum resolution and 55 for the resolution to dismiss the government 135 Donetsk People s Republic separatist Igor Girkin said in January 2015 that Crimean members of parliament were held at gunpoint and were forced to support the annexation 136 These actions were immediately declared illegal by the Ukrainian interim government 137 On the same day more troops in unmarked uniforms assisted this time by what appeared to be local Berkut riot police as well as Russian troops from the 31st Separate Airborne Assault Brigade dressed in Berkut uniforms 138 established security checkpoints on the Isthmus of Perekop and the Chonhar Peninsula which separate Crimea from the Ukrainian mainland 128 139 140 141 142 Within hours Ukraine had been cut off from Crimea Shortly afterwards Ukrainian TV channels became unavailable for Crimean viewers and some of them were replaced with Russian stations nbsp The blockade of military units of the Armed Forces of Ukraine during the capture of Crimea by Russia in February March 2014On 1 March 2014 Aksyonov said that he would exercise control of all Ukrainian military and security installations on the peninsula He also asked Putin for assistance in ensuring peace and tranquillity in Crimea 143 Putin promptly received authorisation from the Federation Council of Russia for a Russian military intervention in Ukraine until the political social situation in the country is normalized 144 145 Putin s swift manoeuvre prompted protests of some Russian intelligentsia and demonstrations in Moscow against a Russian military campaign in Crimea By 2 March Russian troops moving from the country s naval base in Sevastopol and reinforced by troops armour and helicopters from mainland Russia exercised complete control over the Crimean Peninsula 146 147 148 Russian troops operated in Crimea without insignia On 3 March they blockaded Southern Naval Base On 4 March Ukrainian General Staff said there were units of the 18th Motor Rifle Brigade 31st Air Assault Brigade and 22nd Spetsnaz Brigade deployed and operating in Crimea instead of Russian Black Sea Fleet personnel which violated international agreements signed by Ukraine and Russia 149 150 At a press conference on the same day Russian president Vladimir Putin said that Russia had no plans to annex Crimea 151 He also said that it had no plans to invade Ukraine but that it might intervene if Russians in Ukraine were threatened 151 This was part of a pattern of public denials of the ongoing Russian military operation 151 Numerous media reports and statements by the Ukrainian and foreign governments noted the identity of the unmarked troops as Russian soldiers but Russian officials concealed the identity of their forces claiming they were local self defence units over whom they had no authority 37 As late as 17 April Russian foreign minister Sergey Lavrov said that there were no excessive Russian troops in Ukraine 152 At the same press conference Putin said of the peninsula that only citizens themselves in conditions of free expression of will and their security can determine their future 153 Putin later acknowledged that he had ordered work to bring Crimea back into Russia as early as February 38 He also acknowledged that in early March there were secret opinion polls held in Crimea which according to him reported overwhelming popular support for Crimea s incorporation into Russia 154 Russia eventually admitted its troops presence 155 Defence Minister Sergey Shoygu said the country s military actions in Crimea were undertaken by forces of the Black Sea Fleet and were justified by threat to lives of Crimean civilians and danger of takeover of Russian military infrastructure by extremists 156 better source needed Ukraine complained that by increasing its troop presence in Crimea Russia violated the agreement under which it headquartered its Black Sea Fleet in Sevastopol 157 and violated the country s sovereignty 158 The United States and United Kingdom accused Russia of breaking the terms of the Budapest Memorandum on Security Assurances by which Russia the US and the UK had reaffirmed their obligation to refrain from the threat or use of force against the territorial integrity or political independence of Ukraine 159 The Russian government said the Budapest Memorandum 160 did not apply due to circumstances resulting from the action of internal political or socio economic factors 161 In March 2015 retired Russian Admiral Igor Kasatonov ru stated that according to his information the Russian troop deployment in Crimea included six helicopter landings and three landings of an IL 76 with 500 people 162 163 Legal issues See also Declaration of Independence of Crimea The obligations between Russia and Ukraine with regard to territorial integrity and the prohibition of the use of force are laid down in a number of multilateral or bilateral agreements to which Russia and Ukraine are signatories 164 165 159 166 Vladimir Putin said that Russian troops in the Crimean peninsula were aimed to ensure proper conditions for the people of Crimea to be able to freely express their will 167 whilst Ukraine and other nations argue that such intervention is a violation of Ukraine s sovereignty 158 In the 1994 Budapest Memorandum on Security Assurances 160 Russia was among those who affirmed to respect the territorial integrity of Ukraine including Crimea and to refrain from the threat or use of force against the territorial integrity or political independence of Ukraine 159 166 The 1997 Russian Ukrainian Treaty on Friendship 168 Cooperation and Partnership again reaffirmed the inviolability of the borders between both states 166 and required Russian forces in Crimea to respect the sovereignty of Ukraine honor its legislation and not interfere in the internal affairs of the country 169 The Russian Ukrainian Partition Treaty on the Status and Conditions of the Black Sea Fleet signed in 1997 and prolonged in 2010 determined the status of Russian military presence in Crimea and restricted their operations 166 including requirement to show their military identification cards when crossing the international border and that operations beyond designated deployment sites was permitted only after coordination with Ukraine 169 According to Ukraine usage of navigation stations and troop movements were improperly covered by the treaty and were violated many times as well as related court decisions February s troop movements were in complete disregard of the treaty 170 note 4 nbsp Little green men and trucks after the seizure of Perevalne military base 9 March 2014According to the Constitution of Russia the admission of new federal subjects is governed by federal constitutional law art 65 2 172 Such a law was adopted in 2001 and it postulates that admission of a foreign state or its part into Russia shall be based on a mutual accord between the Russian Federation and the relevant state and shall take place pursuant to an international treaty between the two countries moreover it must be initiated by the state in question not by its subdivision or by Russia 173 On 28 February 2014 Russian MP Sergey Mironov along with other members of the Duma introduced a bill to alter Russia s procedure for adding federal subjects According to the bill accession could be initiated by a subdivision of a country provided that there is absence of efficient sovereign state government in foreign state the request could be made either by subdivision bodies on their own or on the basis of a referendum held in the subdivision in accordance with corresponding national legislation 174 On 11 March 2014 both the Supreme Council of Crimea and the Sevastopol City Council adopted a declaration of independence which stated their intent to declare independence and request full accession to Russia should the pro Russian option receive the most votes during the scheduled status referendum The declaration directly referred to the Kosovo independence precedent by which the Albanian populated Autonomous Province of Kosovo and Metohija declared independence from Russia s ally Serbia as the Republic of Kosovo in 2008 a unilateral action Russia staunchly opposed Many analysts saw the Crimean declaration as an overt effort to pave the way for Crimea s annexation by Russia 175 Crimean authorities stated plans to declare independence from Ukraine made the Mironov bill unnecessary On 20 March 2014 two days after the treaty of accession was signed the bill was withdrawn by its initiators 176 non primary source needed At its meeting on 21 22 March the Council of Europe s Venice Commission stated that the Mironov bill violated in particular the principles of territorial integrity national sovereignty non intervention in the internal affairs of another state and pacta sunt servanda and was therefore incompatible with international law 177 178 Crimean status referendum Main article 2014 Crimean status referendum On 27 February 2014 following the takeover of its building by Russian special forces the Supreme Council of Crimea voted to hold a referendum on 25 May with the initial question as to whether Crimea should upgrade its autonomy within Ukraine 179 non primary source needed The referendum date was later moved from 25 May to 30 March 180 A Ukrainian court declared the referendum to be illegal 181 On 6 March the Supreme Council moved the referendum date to 16 March and changed its scope to ask a new question whether Crimea should apply to join Russia as a federal subject or restore the 1992 Crimean constitution within Ukraine which the Ukrainian government had previously invalidated This referendum unlike one announced earlier contained no option to maintain the status quo of governance under the 1998 constitution 182 Ukraine s acting President Oleksandr Turchynov stated that The authorities in Crimea are totally illegitimate both the parliament and the government They are forced to work under the barrel of a gun and all their decisions are dictated by fear and are illegal 183 On 14 March the Crimean status referendum was deemed unconstitutional by the Constitutional Court of Ukraine 184 and a day later the Verkhovna Rada formally dissolved the Crimean parliament 36 With a referendum looming Russia massed troops near the Ukrainian eastern border 185 likely to threaten escalation and stymie Ukraine s response The referendum was held despite the opposition from the Ukrainian government Official results reported about 95 5 of participating voters in Crimea turnout was 83 were in favour of seceding from Ukraine and joining Russia 46 186 187 The results of referendum were questioned 188 another report by Evgeny Bobrov a member of the Russian President s Human Rights Council suggested the official results were inflated and only 15 to 30 of Crimeans eligible to vote actually voted for the Russian option 35 189 190 The means by which the referendum was conducted were widely criticised by foreign governments 191 and in the Ukrainian and international press with reports that anyone holding a Russian passport regardless of residency in Crimea was allowed to vote 192 OSCE refused to send observers to the referendum stating that invitation should have come from an OSCE member state in question i e Ukraine rather than local authorities 193 Russia invited a group of observers from various European far right political parties aligned with Putin who stated the referendum was conducted in a free and fair manner 194 195 Proclamations of independence of the Republic of Crimea Republic of Crimea country redirects here For other uses see Republic of Crimea disambiguation See also Declaration of Independence of the Republic of Crimea The Republic of Crimea was short lived On 17 March following the official announcement of the referendum results the Supreme Council of Crimea declared the formal independence of the Republic of Crimea comprising the territories of both the Autonomous Republic of Crimea and the city of Sevastopol which was granted special status within the breakaway republic 196 The Crimean parliament declared the partial repeal of Ukrainian laws and began nationalising private and Ukrainian state property located on the Crimean Peninsula including Ukrainian ports 197 and property of Chornomornaftogaz 198 Parliament also formally requested that the Russian government admit the breakaway republic into Russia 199 with Sevastopol asking to be admitted as a city of federal significance 200 On the same day the de facto Supreme Council renamed itself the State Council of Crimea 201 declared the Russian ruble an official currency alongside the hryvnia 202 and in June the Russian ruble became the only form of legal tender 203 Putin officially recognised the Republic of Crimea as a sovereign and independent state by decree on 17 March 204 205 On 21 March the Republic of Crimea became a federal Subject of Russia Accession treaty and finalization of the annexation See also Republic of Crimea Crimean Federal District and Political status of Crimea nbsp President Putin with Vladimir Konstantinov Sergey Aksyonov and Alexey Chaly at the Kremlin 18 March 2014The Treaty on Accession of the Republic of Crimea to Russia was signed between representatives of the Republic of Crimea including Sevastopol with which the rest of Crimea briefly unified and the Russian Federation on 18 March 2014 to lay out terms for the immediate admission of the Republic of Crimea and Sevastopol as federal subjects of Russia and part of the Russian Federation 206 207 note 5 On 19 March the Russian Constitutional Court decided that the treaty is in compliance with the Constitution of Russia 209 The treaty was ratified by the Federal Assembly and Federation Council by 21 March 210 A Just Russia s Ilya Ponomarev was the only State Duma member to vote against the treaty 211 The Republic of Crimea and the federal city of Sevastopol became the 84th and 85th federal subjects of Russia 212 During a controversial incident in Simferopol on 18 March some Ukrainian sources said that armed gunmen that were reported to be Russian special forces allegedly stormed the base This was contested by Russian authorities who subsequently announced the arrest of an alleged Ukrainian sniper in connection with the killings 213 but later denied the arrest had occurred 214 The two casualties had a joint funeral attended by both the Crimean and Ukrainian authorities and both the Ukrainian soldier and Russian paramilitary self defence volunteer were mourned together 215 As of March 2014 the incident was under investigation by both the Crimean authorities and the Ukrainian military 216 217 In response to shooting Ukraine s then acting defense minister Ihor Tenyukh authorised Ukrainian troops stationed in Crimea to use deadly force in life threatening situations This increased the risk of bloodshed during any takeover of Ukrainian military installations yet the ensuing Russian operations to seize the remaining Ukrainian military bases and ships in Crimea did not bring new fatalities although weapons were used and several people were injured The Russian units involved in such operations were ordered to avoid usage of deadly force when possible Morale among the Ukrainian troops which for three weeks were blockaded inside their compounds without any assistance from the Ukrainian government was very low and the vast majority of them did not offer any real resistance 218 On 24 March the Ukrainian government ordered the full withdrawal of all of its armed forces from Crimea 219 Approximately 50 of the Ukrainian soldiers in Crimea had defected to the Russian military 220 221 On 26 March the last Ukrainian military bases and Ukrainian Navy ships were captured by Russian troops 222 Occupation nbsp May Day parade in Simferopol 1 May 2019 Main article Russian occupation of Crimea On 27 March the United Nations General Assembly adopted a non binding resolution which declared the Crimean referendum and subsequent status change invalid by a vote of 100 to 11 with 58 abstentions and 24 absent 223 224 Crimea and Sevastopol switched to Moscow Time at 10 p m on 29 March 225 226 On 31 March Russia unilaterally denounced the Kharkiv Pact 227 and Partition Treaty on the Status and Conditions of the Black Sea Fleet 228 Putin cited the accession of the Republic of Crimea and Sevastopol into Russia and resulting practical end of renting relationships as his reason for the denunciation 229 On the same day he signed a decree formally rehabilitating the Crimean Tatars who were ousted from their lands in 1944 and the Armenian German Greek and Bulgarian minority communities in the region that Stalin also ordered removed in the 1940s Also on 31 March 2014 the Russian Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev announced a series of programmes aimed at swiftly incorporating the territory of Crimea into Russia s economy and infrastructure Medvedev announced the creation of a new ministry for Crimean affairs and ordered Russia s top ministers who joined him there to make coming up with a development plan their top priority 230 On 3 April 2014 the Republic of Crimea and the city of Sevastopol became parts of Russia s Southern Military District citation needed On 7 May 2015 Crimea switched its phone code system from the Ukrainian number system to the Russian number system 231 On 11 April the Constitution of the Republic of Crimea and City Charter of Sevastopol were adopted by their respective legislatures 232 233 coming into effect the following day in addition the new federal subjects were enumerated in a newly published revision of the Russian Constitution 234 235 On 14 April Vladimir Putin announced that he would open a ruble only account with Bank Rossiya and would make it the primary bank in the newly annexed Crimea as well as giving the right to service payments on Russia s 36 billion wholesale electricity market which gave the bank 112 million annually from commission charges alone 236 nbsp Crimea dark green Rest of Ukraine light green and Russia light red in EuropeRussia withdrew its forces from southern Kherson in December 2014 237 In July 2015 Russian Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev declared that Crimea had been fully integrated into Russia 238 Until 2016 these new subjects were grouped in the Crimean Federal District On 8 August 2016 Ukraine reported that Russia had increased its military presence along the demarcation line 239 In response to this military buildup Ukraine also deployed more troops and resources closer to the border with Crimea 240 The Pentagon has downplayed a Russian invasion of Ukraine calling Russian troops along the border a regular military exercise 241 On 10 August Russia claimed two servicemen were killed in clashes with Ukrainian commandos and that Ukrainian servicemen had been captured with a total of 40 kg of explosives in their possession 242 Ukraine denied that the incident took place 243 Russian accounts claimed that Russian FSB detained Ukrainian saboteurs and terrorists near Armiansk The ensuing gunfight left one FSB officer and a suspect dead A number of individuals were detained including Yevhen Panov who is described by Russian sources as a Ukrainian military intelligence officer and leader of the sabotage group The group was allegedly planning terror attacks on important infrastructure in Armiansk Crimea 244 245 Ukrainian media reported that Panov was a military volunteer fighting in the east of the country however he has more recently been associated with a charitable organization Russia also claimed that the alleged border infiltration was accompanied by heavy fire from Ukrainian territory resulting in the death of a Russian soldier 244 245 The Ukrainian government called the Russian accusations cynical and senseless and argued that since Crimea was Ukrainian territory it was Russia which has been generously financing and actively supporting terrorism on Ukrainian territory 246 nbsp A pro war propaganda event in Sevastopol Crimea 29 April 2022In 2017 a survey performed by the Centre for East European and International Studies showed that 85 of the non Crimean Tatar respondents believed that if the referendum would be held again it would lead to the same or only marginally different results Crimea was fully integrated into the Russian media sphere and links with the rest of Ukraine were hardly existent 247 248 On 26 November 2018 lawmakers in the Ukraine Parliament overwhelmingly backed the imposition of martial law along Ukraine s coastal regions and those bordering Russia in response to the firing upon and seizure of Ukrainian naval ships by Russia near the Crimean peninsula a day earlier A total of 276 lawmakers in Kyiv backed the measure which took effect on 28 November 2018 and was ended on 26 December 249 250 On 28 December 2018 Russia completed a high tech security fence marking the de facto border between Crimea and Ukraine 251 In 2021 Ukraine launched the Crimea Platform a diplomatic initiative aimed at protecting the rights of Crimean inhabitants and ultimately reversing the annexation of Crimea 252 Transition and aftermathEconomic implications See also Economic history of the Russian Federation and Russian financial crisis 2014 2016 Initially after the annexation salaries rose especially those of government workers citation needed This was soon offset by the increase in prices caused by the depreciation of the ruble Wages were cut back by 30 to 70 after Russian authority became established citation needed Tourism previously Crimea s main industry suffered in particular down by 50 from 2014 in 2015 253 254 Crimean agricultural yields were also significantly impacted by the annexation citation needed Ukraine cut off supplies of water through the North Crimean Canal which supplies 85 of Crimea s fresh water causing the 2014 rice crop to fail and greatly damaging the maize and soybean crops 255 The annexation had a negative influence on Russians working in Ukraine and Ukrainians working in Russia 256 The number of tourists visiting Crimea in the 2014 season was lower than in the previous years due to a combination of Western sanctions ethical objections by Ukrainians and the difficulty of getting there for Russians 257 The Russian government attempted to stimulate the flow of tourists by subsidizing holidays in the peninsula for children and state workers from all Russia 258 259 better source needed which worked mostly for state owned hotels In 2015 overall 3 million tourists visited Crimea according to official data while before annexation it was around 5 5 million on average The shortage is attributed mostly to stopped flow of tourists from Ukraine Hotels and restaurants are also experiencing problems with finding enough seasonal workers who were most arriving from Ukraine in the preceding years Tourists visiting state owned hotels were complaining mostly about low standard of rooms and facilities some of them still unrepaired from Soviet times 260 According to the German newspaper Die Welt the annexation of Crimea is economically disadvantageous for the Russian Federation Russia will have to spend billions of euros a year to pay salaries and pensions Moreover Russia will have to undertake costly projects to connect Crimea to the Russian water supply and power system because Crimea has no land connection to Russia and at present 2014 gets water gas and electricity from mainland Ukraine This required building a bridge and a pipeline across the Kerch Strait Also Novinite claims that a Ukrainian expert told Die Welt that Crimea will not be able to attract tourists 261 The then first Deputy to Minister of Finance of Russian Federation Tatyana Nesterenko said that the decision to annex Crimea was made by Vladimir Putin exclusively without consulting Russia s Finance Ministry 262 The Russian business newspaper Kommersant expresses an opinion that Russia will not acquire anything economically from accessing Crimea which is not very developed industrially having just a few big factories and whose yearly gross product is only 4 billion The newspaper also says that everything from Russia will have to be delivered by sea higher costs of transportation will result in higher prices for everything and to avoid a decline in living standards Russia will have to subsidise Crimean people for a few months In total Kommersant estimates the costs of integrating Crimea into Russia in 30 billion over the next decade i e 3 billion per year 263 Western oil experts who estimate that Russia s seizing of Crimea and the associated control of an area of Black Sea more than three times its land area gives it access to oil and gas reserves potentially worth trillions of dollars 264 It also deprives Ukraine of its chances of energy independence Moscow s acquisition may alter the route along which the South Stream pipeline would be built saving Russia money time and engineering challenges citation needed It would also allow Russia to avoid building in Turkish territorial waters which was necessary in the original route to avoid Ukrainian territory 265 This pipeline was later canceled in favour of TurkStream however nbsp Vladimir Putin and his close confidant Arkady Rotenberg before the opening of the Crimean Bridge in May 2018The Russian Federal Service for Communications Roskomnadzor warned about a transition period as Russian operators have to change the numbering capacity and subscribers Country code will be replaced from the Ukrainian 380 to Russian 7 Codes in Crimea start with 65 but in the area of 7 the 6 is given to Kazakhstan which shares former Soviet Union 7 with Russia so city codes have to change The regulator assigned 869 dialling code to Sevastopol and the rest of the peninsula received a 365 code 266 At the time of the unification with Russia telephone operators and Internet service providers in Crimea and Sevastopol are connected to the outside world through the territory of Ukraine 267 Minister of Communications of Russia Nikolai Nikiforov announced on his Twitter account that postal codes in Crimea will now have six figures to the existing five digit number the number two will be added at the beginning For example the Simferopol postal code 95000 will become 295000 268 In the area that now forms the border between Crimea and Ukraine mining the salt lake inlets from the sea that constitute the natural borders and in the spit of land left over stretches of no man s land with wire on either side was created 269 On early June that year Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev signed a Government resolution No 961 270 dated 5 June 2014 establishing air sea road and railway checkpoints The adopted decisions create a legal basis for the functioning of a checkpoint system at the Russian state border in the Republic of Crimea and Sevastopol 271 third party source needed In the year following the annexation armed men seized various Crimean businesses including banks hotels shipyards farms gas stations a bakery a dairy and Yalta Film Studio 272 273 274 Russian media have noted this trend as returning to the 90 s which is perceived as a period of anarchy and rule of gangs in Russia 275 After 2014 the Russian government invested heavily in the peninsula s infrastructure repairing roads modernizing hospitals and building the Crimean Bridge that links the peninsula to the Russian mainland Development of new sources of water was undertaken with huge difficulties to replace closed Ukrainian sources 276 In 2015 the Investigative Committee of Russia announced a number of theft and corruption cases in infrastructure projects in Crimea for example spending that exceeded the actual accounted costs by a factor of three A number of Russian officials were also arrested for corruption including head of federal tax inspection 277 According to February 2016 official Ukrainian figures after Russia s annexation 10 of Security Service of Ukraine personnel left Crimea accompanied by 6 000 of the pre annexation 20 300 people strong Ukrainian army 278 As result of the disputed political status of Crimea Russian mobile operators never expanded their operations into Crimea and all mobile services are offered on the basis of internal roaming which caused significant controversy inside Russia Telecoms however argued that expanding coverage to Crimea will put them at risk of Western sanctions and as result they will lose access to key equipment and software none of which is produced locally 279 280 The first five years of Crimean occupation cost Russia over 20 billion roughly equal to two years of Russia s entire education budget 281 Human rights situation According to the United Nations and multiple NGOs Russia is responsible for multiple human rights abuses including torture arbitrary detention forced disappearances and instances of discrimination including persecution of Crimean Tatars in Crimea since the illegal annexation 282 283 The UN Human Rights Office has documented multiple human rights violations in Crimea Noting that minority Crimean Tatars have been disproportionately affected 284 285 In December 2016 the UN General Assembly voted on a resolution on human rights in occupied Crimea It called on the Russian Federation to take all measures necessary to bring an immediate end to all abuses against residents of Crimea in particular reported discriminatory measures and practices arbitrary detentions torture and other cruel inhumane or degrading treatment and to revoke all discriminatory legislation It also urged Russia to immediately release Ukrainian citizens who were unlawfully detained and judged without regard for elementary standards of justice 286 After the annexation Russian authorities banned Crimean Tatar organizations filed criminal charges against Tatar leaders and journalists and targeted the Tatar population The Atlantic Council have described this as the practice of collective punishment and therefore as a war crime prohibited under international humanitarian law and Geneva convention 287 better source needed In March 2014 Human Rights Watch reported that pro Ukrainian activists and journalists had been attacked abducted and tortured by self defense groups 288 Some Crimeans were simply disappeared with no explanation 289 On 9 May 2014 the new anti extremist amendment to the Criminal Code of Russia passed in December 2013 came into force Article 280 1 designated incitement of violation of territorial integrity of the Russian Federation 290 incl calls for secession of Crimea from Russia 291 as a criminal offense in Russia punishable by a fine of 300 thousand roubles or imprisonment up to 3 years If such statements are made in public media or the internet the punishment could be obligatory works up to 480 hours or imprisonment up to five years 290 According to a report released on the Russian government run President of Russia s Council on Civil Society and Human Rights website Tatars who were opposed to Russian rule have been persecuted Russian law restricting freedom of speech has been imposed and the new Russian authorities liquidated the Kyiv Patriarchate Orthodox church on the peninsula 292 35 The Crimean Tatar television station was also shut down by the Russian authorities 289 nbsp Russian President Putin meeting with representatives of the Crimean Tatars 16 May 2014On 16 May the new Russian authorities of Crimea issued a ban on the annual commemorations of the anniversary of the deportation of the Crimean Tatars by Stalin in 1944 citing possibility of provocation by extremists as a reason 293 Previously when Crimea was controlled by Ukraine these commemorations had taken place every year The Russian installed Crimean authorities also banned Mustafa Dzhemilev a human rights activist Soviet dissident member of the Ukrainian parliament and former Chairman of the Mejlis of the Crimean Tatars from entering Crimea 294 Additionally Mejlis reported that officers of Russia s Federal Security Service FSB raided Tatar homes in the same week on the pretense of suspicion of terrorist activity 295 The Tatar community eventually did hold commemorative rallies in defiance of the ban 294 295 In response Russian authorities flew helicopters over the rallies in an attempt to disrupt them 296 In May 2015 a local activist Alexander Kostenko was sentenced to four years in a penal colony His lawyer Dmitry Sotnikov said that the case was fabricated and that his client had been beaten and starved Crimean prosecutor Natalia Poklonskaya accused Kostenko of making Nazi gestures during the Maidan protests and that they were judging not just Kostenko but the very idea of fascism and Nazism which are trying to raise their head once again Sotnikov responded that There are fabricated cases in Russia but rarely such humiliation and physical harm A living person is being tortured for a political idea to be able to boast winning over fascism 297 In June 2015 Razom released a report compiling human rights abuses in Crimea 298 299 In its 2016 annual report the Council of Europe made no mention of human rights abuses in Crimea because Russia had not allowed its monitors to enter 300 In February 2016 human rights defender Emir Usein Kuku from Crimea was arrested and accused of belonging to the Islamist organization Hizb ut Tahrir although he denies any involvement in this organization Amnesty International has called for his immediate release 301 302 On 24 May 2014 Ervin Ibragimov a former member of the Bakhchysarai Town Council and a member of the World Congress of Crimean Tatars went missing CCTV footage from a camera at a nearby shop documents that Ibragimov had been stopped by a group of men and that he is briefly speaking to the men before being forced in their van 303 According to the Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group Russian authorities refuse to investigate the disappearance of Ibragimov 304 In May 2018 Server Mustafayev the founder and coordinator of the human rights movement Crimean Solidarity was imprisoned by Russian authorities and charged with membership of a terrorist organisation Amnesty International and Front Line Defenders demand his immediate release 305 306 On 12 June 2018 Ukraine lodged a memorandum weighing about 90 kg consisting of 17 500 pages of text in 29 volumes to the UN s International Court of Justice about racial discrimination by Russian authorities in occupied Crimea and state financing of terrorism by Russian Federation in Donbas 307 308 Between 2015 and 2019 over 134 000 people living in Crimea applied for and were issued Ukrainian passports 309 Crimean public opinion nbsp Concert to mark the fifth anniversary of annexation in Simferopol Crimea 18 March 2019Prior to Russian occupation support for joining Russia was 23 in a 2013 poll down from 33 in 2011 310 A joint survey by American government agency Broadcasting Board of Governors and polling firm Gallup was taken during April 2014 311 It polled 500 residents of Crimea The survey found that 82 8 of those polled believed that the results of the Crimean status referendum reflected the views of most residents of Crimea whereas 6 7 said that it did not 73 9 of those polled said that they thought that the annexation would have a positive impact on their lives whereas 5 5 said that it would not 13 6 said that they did not know 311 A comprehensive poll released on 8 May 2014 by the Pew Research Centre surveyed local opinions on the annexation 312 Despite international criticism of 16 March referendum on Crimean status 91 of those Crimeans polled thought that the vote was free and fair and 88 said that the Ukrainian government should recognise the results 312 In a survey completed in 2019 by a Russian company FOM 72 of surveyed Crimean residents said their lives have improved since annexation At the same time only 39 Russians living in the mainland said the annexation was beneficial for the country as a whole which marks a significant drop from 67 in 2015 313 Whilst the Russian government actively cited local opinion polls to argue that the annexation was legitimate i e supported by the population of the territory in question 314 315 some authors have cautioned against using surveys concerning identities and support for the annexation conducted in oppressive political environment of Russian held Crimea 316 317 Ukrainian responseSee also Do not buy Russian goods Boycott Russian Films Putin khuylo and Day of Resistance to Occupation of Crimea and Sevastopol Immediately after the treaty of accession was signed in March the Ukrainian Ministry of Foreign Affairs summoned the Provisional Principal of Russia in Ukraine to present note verbale of protest against Russia s recognition of the Republic of Crimea and its subsequent annexation 318 Two days later the Verkhovna Rada condemned the treaty 319 and called Russia s actions a gross violation of international law The Rada called on the international community to avoid recognition of the so called Republic of Crimea or the annexation of Crimea and Sevastopol by Russia as new federal subjects On 15 April 2014 the Verkhovna Rada declared the Autonomous Republic of Crimea and Sevastopol to be under provisional occupation by the Russian military 320 and imposed travel restrictions on Ukrainians visiting Crimea 321 The territories were also deemed inalienable parts of Ukraine subject to Ukrainian law Among other things the special law approved by the Rada restricted foreign citizens movements to and from the Crimean Peninsula and forbade certain types of entrepreneurship 322 The law also forbade activity of government bodies formed in violation of Ukrainian law and designated their acts as null and void 323 better source needed nbsp Following Russia s annexation of Crimea Ukraine blocked the North Crimean Canal which provided 85 of Crimea s drinking water 324 Ukrainian authorities greatly reduced the volume of water flowing into Crimea via the North Crimean Canal due to huge debt for water supplied in the previous year threatening the viability of the peninsula s agricultural crops which are heavily dependent on irrigation 325 326 The Ukrainian National Council for TV and Radio Broadcasting instructed all cable operators on 11 March 2014 to stop transmitting a number of Russian channels including the international versions of the main state controlled stations Russia 1 Channel One and NTV as well as news channel Russia 24 327 In March 2014 activists began organising flash mobs in supermarkets to urge customers not to buy Russian goods and to boycott Russian gas stations banks and concerts In April 2014 some cinemas in Kyiv Lviv and Odesa began shunning Russian films 328 On 2 December 2014 Ukraine created a Ministry of Information Policy with one of its goals being according to first Minister of Information Yuriy Stets to counteract Russian information aggression 329 In December 2014 Ukraine halted all train and bus services to Crimea 330 On 16 September 2015 the Ukrainian parliament voted for the law that sets 20 February 2014 as the official date of the Russian temporary occupation of Crimean peninsula 331 332 On 7 October 2015 the President of Ukraine signed the law into force 333 The Ministry of Temporarily Occupied Territories and IDPs was established by the Ukrainian government on 20 April 2016 to manage occupied parts of Donetsk Luhansk and Crimea regions affected by Russian military intervention of 2014 334 By 2015 the number of IDPs registered in Ukraine who had fled from Russian occupied Crimea was 50 000 335 Russian responseSee also Crimean speech of Vladimir Putin and 2022 Moscow rally nbsp At least 30 000 people at 15 March protests named March of Peace which took place in Moscow a day before the Crimean referendum In a poll published on 24 February 2014 by the state owned Russian Public Opinion Research Center only 15 of those Russians polled said yes to the question Should Russia react to the overthrow of the legally elected authorities in Ukraine 336 The State Duma Committee on Commonwealth of Independent States Affairs headed by Leonid Slutsky visited Simferopol on 25 February 2014 and said If the parliament of the Crimean autonomy or its residents express the wish to join the Russian Federation Russia will be prepared to consider this sort of application We will be examining the situation and doing so fast 337 They also stated that in the event of a referendum for the Crimea region joining the Russian Federation they would consider its results very fast 338 Later Slutsky announced that he was misunderstood by the Crimean press and no decision regarding simplifying the process of acquiring Russian citizenship for people in Crimea had been made yet 339 He also added that if fellow Russian citizens are in jeopardy you understand that we do not stay away 340 On 25 February in a meeting with Crimean politicians he stated that Viktor Yanukovych was still the legitimate president of Ukraine 341 That same day the Russian Duma announced it was determining measures so that Russians in Ukraine who did not want to break from the Russian World could acquire Russian citizenship 342 On 26 February Russian President Vladimir Putin ordered the Russian Armed Forces to be put on alert in the Western Military District as well as units stationed with the 2nd Army Central Military District Command involved in aerospace defence airborne troops and long range military transport Despite media speculation that this was in reaction to the events in Ukraine Russian Defence Minister Sergei Shoigu said it was for reasons separate from the unrest in Ukraine 343 On 27 February 2014 the Russian government dismissed accusations that it was in violation of the basic agreements regarding the Black Sea Fleet All movements of armored vehicles are undertaken in full compliance with the basic agreements and did not require any approvals 344 On 27 February the Russian governing agencies presented the new law project on granting citizenship 345 The Russian Ministry of Foreign Affairs called on the West and particularly NATO to abandon the provocative statements and respect the neutral status of Ukraine 346 In its statement the ministry claims that the agreement on settlement of the crisis which was signed on 21 February and was witnessed by foreign ministries from Germany Poland and France had to this date not been implemented 346 Vladimir Lukin from Russia had not signed it 347 On 28 February according to ITAR TASS the Russian Ministry of Transport discontinued further talks with Ukraine in regards to the Crimean Bridge project 348 However on 3 March Dmitry Medvedev then Prime Minister of Russia signed a decree creating a subsidiary of Russian Highways Avtodor to build a bridge at an unspecified location along the Kerch Strait 349 350 351 On Russian social networks there was a movement to gather volunteers who served in the Russian army to go to Ukraine 352 On 28 February President Putin stated in telephone calls with key EU leaders that it was of extreme importance of not allowing a further escalation of violence and the necessity of a rapid normalisation of the situation in Ukraine 353 Already on 19 February the Russian Ministry of Foreign Affairs had referred to the Euromaidan revolution as the Brown revolution 354 355 In Moscow on 2 March an estimated 27 000 rallied in support of the Russian government s decision to intervene in Ukraine 356 The rallies received considerable attention on Russian state TV and were officially approved by the government 356 Meanwhile on 1 March five people who were picketing next to the Federation Council building against the invasion of Ukraine were arrested 357 The next day about 200 people protested at the building of the Russian Ministry of Defence in Moscow against Russian military involvement 358 About 500 people also gathered to protest on the Manezhnaya Square in Moscow and the same number of people on the Saint Isaac s Square in Saint Petersburg 359 On 2 March about eleven protesters demonstrated in Yekaterinburg against Russian involvement with some wrapped in the Ukrainian flag 360 Protests were also held in Chelyabinsk on the same day 361 Opposition to the military intervention was also expressed by rock musician Andrey Makarevich who wrote in particular You want war with Ukraine It will not be the way it was with Abkhazia the folks on the Maidan have been hardened and know what they are fighting for for their country their independence We have to live with them Still neighborly And preferably in friendship But it s up to them how they want to live 362 The Professor of the Department of Philosophy at the Moscow State Institute of International Relations Andrey Zubov was fired for his article in Vedomosti criticising Russian military intervention 363 On 2 March one Moscow resident protested against Russian intervention by holding a Stop the war banner but he was immediately harassed by passers by Police then proceeded to arrest him A woman came forward with a fabricated charge against him of beating up a child however her claim due to lack of a victim and obviously false was ignored by the police 364 Andrei Zubov a professor at the Moscow State Institute of International Relations who compared Russian actions in Crimea to the 1938 Annexation of Austria by Nazi Germany was threatened Alexander Chuyev the leader of the pro Kremlin Spravedlivaya Rossiya party also objected to Russian intervention in Ukraine Boris Akunin a popular Russian writer predicted that Russia s moves would lead to political and economic isolation 364 nbsp Russian President Vladimir Putin seated middle speaks to the press on 4 March 2014 denouncing the Revolution of Dignity as an unconstitutional coup and insisting that Moscow has a right to protect Russians in Ukraine 365 President Putin s approval rating among the Russian public increased by nearly 10 since the crisis began up to 71 6 the highest in three years according to a poll conducted by the All Russian Center for Public Opinion Research released on 19 March 366 367 Additionally the same poll showed that more than 90 of Russians supported unification with the Crimean Republic 366 According to a 2021 study in the American Political Science Review three quarters of those who rallied to Putin after Russia annexed Crimea were engaging in at least some form of dissembling and that this rallying developed as a rapid cascade with social media joining television in fueling perceptions this was socially desirable 368 On 4 March at a press conference in Novo Ogaryovo President Putin expressed his view on the situation that if a revolution took place in Ukraine it would be a new country with which Russia had not concluded any treaties 369 He offered an analogy with the events of 1917 in Russia when as a result of the revolution the Russian Empire fell apart and a new state was created 369 However he stated Ukraine would still have to honour its debts nbsp Around 100 000 people gathered in Crimean Sevastopol at Victory Day paradeRussian politicians speculated that there were already 143 000 Ukrainian refugees in Russia 370 The Ukrainian Ministry of Foreign Affairs refuted those claims of refugee increases in Russia 371 At a briefing on 4 March 2014 the director of the department of information policy of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Ukraine Yevhen Perebiynis said that Russia was misinforming its own citizens as well as the entire international community to justify its own actions in the Crimea 372 On 5 March an anchor of the Russian controlled TV channel RT America Abby Martin criticized her employer s biased coverage of the military invervention 373 374 Also on 5 March 2014 another RT America anchor Liz Wahl of the network s Washington DC bureau resigned on air explaining that she could not be part of a network that whitewashes the actions of Putin and citing her Hungarian ancestry and the memory of the Soviet repression of the Hungarian Uprising as a factor in her decision 375 In early March Igor Andreyev a 75 year old survivor of the Siege of Leningrad attended an anti war rally against the Russian intervention in Crimea and was holding a sign that read Peace to the World The riot police arrested him and a local pro government lawyer then accused him of being a supporter of fascism The retiree who lived on a 6 500 ruble monthly pension was fined 10 000 rubles 376 Prominent dissident Mikhail Khodorkovsky said that Crimea should stay within Ukraine with broader autonomy 377 Tatarstan a republic within Russia populated by Volga Tatars has sought to alleviate concerns about the treatment of Tatars by Russia as Tatarstan is a gas rich and economically successful republic in Russia 378 On 5 March President of Tatarstan Rustam Minnikhanov signed an agreement on co operation between Tatarstan and the Aksyonov government in Crimea that implied collaboration between ten government institutions as well as significant financial aid to Crimea from Tatarstan businesses 378 On 11 March Minnikhanov was in Crimea on his second visit and attended as a guest in the Crimean parliament chamber during the vote on the declaration of sovereignty pending 16 March referendum 378 The Tatarstan s Mufti Kamil Samigullin invited Crimean Tatars to study in madrasas in Kazan and declared support for their brothers in faith and blood 378 Mustafa Dzhemilev a former leader of the Crimean Tatar Majlis believed that forces that were suspected to be Russian forces should leave the Crimean peninsula 378 and asked the UN Security Council to send peacekeepers into the region 379 nbsp Hotel in Kerch Crimea 2015On 15 March thousands of protesters estimates varying from 3 000 by official sources up to 50 000 claimed by the opposition in Moscow marched against Russian involvement in Ukraine many waving Ukrainian flags 380 At the same time a pro government and pro referendum rally occurred across the street counting in the thousands as well officials claiming 27 000 with the opposition claiming about 10 000 In February 2015 the leading independent Russian newspaper Novaya Gazeta obtained documents 381 allegedly written by oligarch Konstantin Malofeev and others which provided the Russian government with a strategy in the event of Viktor Yanukovych s removal from power and the break up of Ukraine which were considered likely The documents outline plans for annexation of Crimea and the eastern portions of the country closely describing the events that actually followed after Yanukovych s fall The documents also describe plans for a public relations campaign that would seek to justify Russian actions 382 383 384 In June 2015 Mikhail Kasyanov stated that all Russian Duma decisions on Crimea annexation were illegal from the international point of view and the annexation was provoked by false accusations of discrimination of Russian nationals in Ukraine 385 As of January 2019 Arkady Rotenberg through his Stroygazmontazh LLC and his companies building the Crimean Bridge along with Nikolai Shamalov and Yuri Kovalchuk through their Rossiya Bank have become the most important investors in Russia s development of the annexed Crimea 386 International responseMain article International reactions to the annexation of Crimea by the Russian Federation Further information Political status of Crimea and United Nations General Assembly Resolution 68 262 See also Crimea Platform nbsp International reaction to the 2014 Crimean crisis according to official governmental statements note 6 Condemnation of Russian actions as a military intervention or invasion Condemnation of Russian actions Support for Ukrainian territorial integrity Statements only voicing concern or hope for peaceful resolution to the conflict Recognition of Russian interests Support for Russian actions and or condemnation of the Ukrainian interim government Ukraine Russia No official statements No data availableThere have been a range of international reactions to the annexation In March 2014 the UN General Assembly passed a non binding resolution 100 in favour 11 against and 58 abstentions in the 193 nation assembly that declared Crimea s Moscow backed referendum invalid 387 In a move supported by the Lithuanian President 388 the United States government imposed sanctions against persons they deem to have violated or assisted in the violation of Ukraine s sovereignty 389 The European Union suspended talks with Russia on economic and visa related matters and is considering more stringent sanctions against Russia in the near future including asset freezes 390 391 while Japan announced sanctions which include suspension of talks relating to military space investment and visa requirements 392 The United Kingdom qualified the referendum vote in Crimea of being farcical illegal and illegitimate 393 Ukraine and other countries claim that Russia has signed a number of treaties guaranteeing Ukrainian territorial integrity These include the 1991 Belavezha Accords that established the Commonwealth of Independent States the 1975 Helsinki Accords the 1994 Budapest Memorandum on Security Assurances 394 and the 1997 Treaty on friendship cooperation and partnership between the Russian Federation and Ukraine 164 165 395 The European Commission decided on 11 March 2014 to enter into a full free trade agreement with Ukraine within the year 396 On 12 March the European Parliament rejected the upcoming referendum on independence in Crimea which they saw as manipulated and contrary to international and Ukrainian law 397 The G7 bloc of developed nations the G8 minus Russia made a joint statement condemning Russia and announced that they would suspend preparations for the planned G8 summit in Sochi in June 398 399 NATO condemned Russia s military escalation in Crimea and stated that it was a breach of international law 400 while the Council of Europe expressed its full support for the territorial integrity and national unity of Ukraine 401 The Visegrad Group has issued a joint statement urging Russia to respect Ukraine s territorial integrity and for Ukraine to take into account its minority groups to not further break fragile relations It has urged for Russia to respect Ukrainian and international law and in line with the provisions of the 1994 Budapest Memorandum 402 China said We respect the independence sovereignty and territorial integrity of Ukraine A spokesman restated China s belief of non interference in the internal affairs of other nations and urged dialogue 403 404 The Indian government called for a peaceful resolution of the situation 405 Both Syria and Venezuela openly support Russian military action Syrian President Bashar al Assad said that he supports Putin s efforts to restore security and stability in the friendly country of Ukraine while Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro condemned Ukraine s ultra nationalist coup 406 407 Sri Lanka described Yanukovych s removal as unconstitutional and considered Russia s concerns in Crimea as justified 408 Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk called for a change in EU energy policy as Germany s dependence on Russian gas poses risks for Europe 409 On 13 March 2014 German Chancellor Angela Merkel warned the Russian government it risks massive damage to Russia economically and politically if it refuses to change course on Ukraine 410 though close economic links between Germany and Russia significantly reduce the scope for any sanctions 411 After Russia moved to formally incorporate Crimea some worried whether it may do the same in other regions 412 US deputy national security advisor Tony Blinken said that the Russian troops massed on the eastern Ukrainian border may be preparing to enter the country s eastern regions Russian officials stated that Russian troops would not enter other areas 412 US Air Force Gen Philip M Breedlove NATO s supreme allied commander in Europe warned that the same troops were in a position to take over the separatist Russian speaking Moldovan province of Transnistria 412 President of Moldova Nicolae Timofti warned Russia with not attempting to do this to avoid damaging its international status further 413 414 On 9 April the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe deprived Russia of voting rights 415 On 14 August while visiting Crimea Vladimir Putin ruled out pushing beyond Crimea He undertook to do everything he could to end the conflict in Ukraine saying Russia needed to build calmly and with dignity not by confrontation and war which isolated it from the rest of the world 416 United Nations resolutions nbsp UN Security Council vote on a draft resolution condemning the 2014 Crimean referendum Voted in favour of the resolution Abstained Vetoed the resolution nbsp UN General Assembly vote on the resolution condemning the 2014 Crimean referendum In favour of considering the referendum illegal Abstained Absent when the vote took place Against adopting the resolution For a more comprehensive list see List of vetoed United Nations Security Council resolutions On 15 March 2014 a US sponsored resolution that went to a vote in the UN Security Council to reaffirm that council s commitment to Ukraine s sovereignty independence unity and territorial integrity was not approved Though a total of 13 council members voted in favour of the resolution and China abstained Russia vetoed the resolution 417 On 27 March 2014 the UN General Assembly approved a resolution describing the referendum leading to annexation of Crimea by Russia as illegal 418 The draft resolution which was titled Territorial integrity of Ukraine was co sponsored by Canada Costa Rica Germany Lithuania Poland Ukraine and the US It affirmed the council s commitment to the sovereignty political independence unity and territorial integrity of Ukraine within its internationally recognised borders The resolution tried to underscore that 16 March referendum held in Crimea and the city of Sevastopol has no validity and cannot form the basis for any alteration of the status of the Autonomous Republic of Crimea or of the city of Sevastopol The resolution got 100 votes in its favour while 11 nations voted against and 58 countries abstained from the vote The resolution was non binding and the vote was largely symbolic 419 Since 2014 the UN General Assembly has voted several times most recently in December 2019 420 to affirm Ukraine s territorial integrity condemn the temporary occupation of Crimea and reaffirm nonrecognition of its annexation 420 International recognition Afghanistan Cuba North Korea Kyrgyzstan Nicaragua Sudan Syria and Zimbabwe have recognised the result of the 2014 referendum in Crimea 421 Four non UN member states recognised the results of the referendum Abkhazia South Ossetia Artsakh and Transnistria The Transnistrian foreign minister Nina Shtanski recognized Crimea s annexation by Russia 422 Transnistria sent a request on 18 March 2014 to join the Russian Federation following the Crimean example and in compliance with the Admission Law provisions 423 424 425 The regional councils of Italy s northern regions Lombardy Liguria and Veneto adopted a non binding resolution on recognizing Crimea as part of Russia but they revoked it in 2022 after Russia invaded Ukraine 426 427 Sanctions Further information International sanctions during the Ukrainian crisis and List of individuals sanctioned during the Ukrainian crisis nbsp Ukrainian checkpoint at Kalanchak entering Kherson Oblast from Russian occupied Crimea Sanctions were imposed to prevent officials and politicians from travelling to Canada the United States or the European Union They were the most wide ranging applied to Russia since the fall of the Soviet Union 428 429 Japan announced milder sanctions than the US and EU These include suspension of talks relating to military space investment and visa requirements 430 In response to the sanctions introduced by the US and EU the Russian Duma unanimously passed a resolution asking for all members of the Duma to be included on the sanctions list 431 Head of the Just Russia party Sergei Mironov said he was proud of being included on the sanctions list It is with pride that I have found myself on the black list this means they have noticed my stance on Crimea 432 Russian companies started pulling billions of dollars out of Western banks to avoid having their asset frozen 433 Three days after the lists were published the Russian Foreign Ministry published a reciprocal sanctions list of US citizens which consisted of 10 names including House Speaker John Boehner Senator John McCain and two advisers to President Obama The ministry said in a statement We have repeatedly warned that sanctions are a double edged instrument and would hit the United States like a boomerang 388 Several of those sanctioned responded with pride at their inclusion on the list including John Boehner 434 John McCain 434 Bob Menendez 435 Dan Coats 434 Mary Landrieu and Harry Reid 436 On 24 March Russia imposed retaliatory sanctions on 13 Canadian officials including members of the Parliament of Canada 437 banning them from entering Russia Foreign Affairs Minister John Baird said the sanctions were a badge of honour 438 Former Minister of Justice Irwin Cotler also said that he considered the sanctions a badge of honour not a mark of exclusion 437 The good news is that so far Russia has shown no inclination to use the Northern Distribution Network as leverage in the wake of US retaliation for its troop movements in Crimea 439 Expanded Western sanctions in mid March coursed through financial markets hitting the business interests of some of Russia s richest people Jack Farchy Neil Hume 21 March 2014 Russian share prices drop as sanctions bite Financial Times Retrieved 21 March 2014 The Americans centred on the heart of Moscow s leadership Neil Buckley 21 March 2014 Putin feels the heat as sanctions target president s inner circle Financial Times Retrieved 21 March 2014 lt ref gt title Russia Staring at Recession on Sanctions That Could Get Tougher url https www bloomberg com news 2014 03 23 russia staring at recession on sanctions that could get tougher htmlhough the EU s initial list shied fromx lt ref gt Russian banks warned of a sanctions induced recession 440 the country braced for capital outflows for the first three months of 2014 to reach 70 billion 441 more than the entirety of outflows for 2013 442 and Russian government bond issues plummeted by three quarters compared with the same period the previous year 443 Novatek Russia s second largest gas producer saw 2 5bn in market value wiped out when its shares sank by nearly 10 rendering Putin s close friend Gennady Timchenko who has a 23 stake in the company 575m poorer 444 I do hope that there is some serious diplomatic activity going on behind the scenes said one Russian banker 445 though others were more sanguine on the question of whether the sanctions would have any enduring effect 446 447 and Russians top and bottom seemed defiant 448 The official Russian response was mixed 449 The then Minister of Economic Development of the Russian Federation Alexey Ulyukaev said that introduction of sectoral sanctions will lead to a serious decline of the Russian economy economic growth of Russia will become seriously negative the growth of volumes of investment will be even more negative inflation will rise and government revenues and reserves will go down 450 As well as differences between the United States and Europe as a whole as to how to respond to the Russian backed incursion those same differences have played out among Eastern European countries 451 A number of Russian citizens reported that they have been denied European visas after they visited Crimea after annexation 452 A Russian consumer protection watchdog OZPP published a warning for Russian tourists about this risk explaining that from the international law point of view Crimea is an occupied territory after which Roskomnadzor blocked the OZPP website for threatening territorial integrity of Russian Federation 453 In response to having its voting rights revoked Russia in June 2017 suspended its budget payments to the Council of Europe with Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov stating payments would not resume until all rights of Russia s delegation were fully restored 454 Council Secretary General Thorbjorn Jagland has suggested lifting the sanctions to avoid the impact of mounting budgetary restraints However Council members such as Ukraine and its supporters have argued that readmitting Russia without demanding concessions in return would amount to caving to Russian blackmail 455 456 Mapping Further information Cartographic aggression nbsp Location of the Crimea Federal District within Russia in 2014 The United Nations maps Crimea as belonging to Ukraine 457 National Geographic Society stated that their policy is to portray current reality and Crimea if it is formally annexed by Russia would be shaded gray but also further remarked that this step does not suggest recognising the legitimacy of such 458 As of April 2014 Crimea was still displayed as part of Ukraine 459 As of April 2014 update Google Maps displays Crimea as a disputed territory to most viewers 459 For the Russian and Ukrainian versions of the website Crimea is marked as belonging to the corresponding country Russia or Ukraine respectively 459 Google stated that it work s with sources to get the best interpretation of the border or claim lines 460 Yandex displays Crimea as part of Russia for ru and com domains since the end of March 2014 461 According to the official statement the company works with users from different countries and displays reality that surrounds them 462 As of March 2014 update Bing Maps 463 OpenStreetMap and HERE displayed Crimea as belonging to Ukraine 459 In particular OpenStreetMap requested its users to refrain from editing borders and administrative relations of subdivisions located in the Autonomous Republic of Crimea and Sevastopol until 31 May 2014 459 On 5 June 2014 OpenStreetMap switched to a territorial dispute option displaying Crimea as a disputed territory belonging to both countries 464 In 2015 on the PepsiCo website a Russian language map was visible for a few days that depicted Crimea as a part of Russia 465 The 2016 edition of a French atlas published by Larousse shows Crimea as part of Russian territory Oleh Shamshur Ukrainian Ambassador to France expressed shock 466 Shortly after Larousse changed the map to reflect Crimea as part of Ukraine on the Atlas on their internet version 467 468 The Italian language magazine of geopolitics Limes maps Crimea as a part of Russia since December 2015 469 Following protests from the Ukrainian embassy in Italy the magazine editor Lucio Caracciolo wrote that the map reflects reality When Crimea and Sevastopol will be back under effective Ukrainian sovereignty we will produce a map that reflects such reality 470 The Russian version of Apple s App Store began to show Crimea as part of Russia on 27 November 2019 471 See alsoOutline of the Russo Ukrainian War 2021 2022 Russo Ukrainian crisis Annexation of Southern and Eastern Ukraine Annexation of the Crimean Khanate by the Russian Empire 1783 Proposed Russian annexation of South Ossetia Proposed Russian annexation of Transnistria Russian occupied territories Occupied territories of Georgia Occupied territories of Moldova Occupied territories of Ukraine Russian imperialism Russian irredentismNotes There remain some contradictions and inherent problems regarding the date on which the occupation began 1 Ukraine considers 20 February 2014 to be the beginning of the temporary occupation of Crimea and Sevastopol by Russia citing the timeframe inscribed on the Russian medal For the Return of Crimea 2 in 2015 the Ukrainian parliament officially designated the date as such 3 In early March 2015 Russian president Vladimir Putin stated in a film about the annexation of Crimea that he ordered the operation to restore Crimea to Russia following an all night emergency meeting on 22 to 23 February 2014 1 4 5 In 2018 the Russian foreign minister claimed that the earlier start date on the medal was due to a technical misunderstanding 6 It also noted that certain politicians local government officials leaders of civil society organizations and radically inclined individuals have attempted to create grounds for escalating the civil conflict and have spread autonomous and separatist attitudes among the people which could lead to the demise of our as a united nation and loss of its national sovereignty In addition the statement said that certain lawmakers of every level have begun separatist negotiations with representatives of foreign nations Open consultations are being held on the possible division of the country into separate parts in violation of the Ukrainian constitution read the statement This could lead to an escalation of conflict between different sectors of society inciting ethnic or religious hatred and military conflict 96 The date was given by Putin in Russian film commemorating the annexation of Crimea however the inscription on the Medal For the Return of Crimea awarded by the Russian Ministry of Defence state put 20 February as the starting date Dilanian 2014 on 3 March CIA director John Brennan told a senior lawmaker Monday that a 1997 treaty between Russia and Ukraine allows up to 25 000 Russia troops in the vital Crimea region so Russia may not consider its recent troop movements to be an invasion U S officials said 171 The treaty between Russia and pro Russian Aksyonov government of Crimea signed on that date specified that Crimea would be considered incorporated into Russia since the date of signing The document entered into force on 1 April 2014 208 but pending that was applied provisionally since very signing 208 If an official position can be sorted in more than one category the strongest position was marked from the call for a peaceful resolution to interpretation as a military intervention consecutively For the sources see the image description References a b McDermott Roger N 2016 Brothers Disunited Russia s use of military power in Ukraine In Black J Johns Michael eds The Return of the Cold War Ukraine the West and Russia Routledge pp 99 129 doi 10 4324 9781315684567 5 ISBN 9781138924093 OCLC 909325250 7683rd meeting of the United Nations Security Council Thursday 28 April 2016 3 p m New York Mr Prystaiko Ukraine In that regard I have to remind the Council that the official medal that was produced by the Russian Federation for the so called return of Crimea has the dates on it starting with 20 February which is the day before that agreement was brought to the attention of the Security Council by the representative of the Russian Federation Therefore the Russian Federation started not just planned but started the annexation of Crimea the day before we reached the first agreement and while President Yanukovych was still in power in Ukrainian Nasha Poklonsky promises to the Berkut fighters to punish the participants of the Maidan Segodnya 20 March 2016 a b Putin reveals secrets of Russia s Crimea takeover plot BBC News 9 March 2015 a b Vladimir Putin describes secret meeting when Russia decided to seize Crimea The Guardian Agence France Presse 9 March 2015 Retrieved 14 April 2016 Russia s Orwellian diplomacy unian info Retrieved 30 January 2019 Kofman Michael 2017 Lessons from Russia s Operations in Crimea and Eastern Ukraine PDF Santa Monica RAND Corporation ISBN 9780833096173 OCLC 990544142 By March 26 the annexation was essentially complete and Russia began returning seized military hardware to Ukraine Matthew Fisher 24 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Berkuta na vezdah v Krym Former USSR Ukraine media reported about Berkut checkpoints at the entrances to Crimea lenta ru Mirovalev Mansur 1 March 2014 Crimea PM Takes Control Of Army Police And Seeks Russian Help NBC News Retrieved 19 June 2021 Federation Council Approves Putin s Request for Troop Deployment in Ukraine The Moscow Times 1 March 2014 Retrieved 19 June 2021 Council of the Federation Russia may introduce troops into Crimea Ukrainska Pravda 1 March 2014 Radyuhin Vladimir March 2014 Russian Parliament approves use of army in Ukraine The Hindu Walker Shaun 4 March 2014 Russian takeover of Crimea will not descend into war says Vladimir Putin The Guardian Retrieved 4 March 2014 Yoon Sangwon Krasnolutska Daryna Choursina Kateryna 4 March 2014 Russia Stays in Ukraine as Putin Channels Yanukovych Request Bloomberg News Retrieved 29 August 2014 Genshtab ZSU u Krimu ne lishe vijskovi z chastin Chornomorskogo flotu General Staff of the Ukrainian Armed Forces in Crimea not just soldiers from units of Black Sea Fleet Ukrayinska Pravda in Ukrainian 5 March 2014 Retrieved 30 December 2014 V Krymu nahodyatsya rossijskie voennosluzhashie ne tolko iz chastej ChF RF utverzhdayut v Genshtabe VSU The Black Sea Fleet are not the only Russian fighting forces to be found in Crimea says the General Staff of AF of Ukraine in Russian 4 March 2014 Retrieved 30 December 2014 a b c Kofman Michael Migacheva Katya Nichiporuk Brian Radin Andrew Tkacheva Olesya Oberholtzer Jenny 2017 Lessons from Russia s Operations in Crimea and Eastern Ukraine PDF Report Santa Monica RAND Corporation pp 14 15 McCarthy Tom Tran Mark 17 April 2014 Ukraine crisis Obama says Russia has hand in disruption and chaos The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 19 June 2021 Rossiya ne rassmatrivaet variant prisoedineniya Kryma k Rossii Russia is not considering the option of annexing Crimea to Russia in Russian Interfax 4 March 2014 Putin Rossiya ne planirovala prisoedinyat Krym Putin Russia did not plan to annex Crimea in Russian Information Telegraph Agency of Russia 10 April 2014 Putin nashi voennye vstali za spinoj samooborony Kryma Putin our military stood behind the back of the self defense of Crimea BBC News Russian in Russian 17 April 2014 Retrieved 19 June 2021 Shojgu dejstviya Minoborony RF v Krymu byli vyzvany ugrozoj zhizni mirnogo naseleniya Shoigu the actions of the Russian Defense Ministry in Crimea were caused by a threat to the lives of civilians in Russian Information Telegraph Agency of Russia 4 April 2014 Russia redeploys ships of Baltic and Northern fleets to Sevastopol violates agreement with Ukraine Ukrinform 3 March 2014 Archived from the original on 26 November 2015 Retrieved 21 October 2015 a b Charles Crawford 10 March 2014 Vladimir Putin s illegal occupation of Crimea is an attempt to put Europe s borders up for grabs The Daily Telegraph Archived from the original on 10 March 2014 Retrieved 24 March 2015 a b c Joint Statement by the United States and Ukraine mfa gov ua 25 March 2014 Archived from the original on 19 April 2014 Retrieved 24 March 2015 a b budapest memorandum UaWarExplained com 29 March 2022 Retrieved 29 March 2022 Medvedev Rossiya ne garantiruet celostnost Ukrainy Medvedev Russia does not guarantee the integrity of Ukraine BBC News Russian in Russian 20 May 2014 Retrieved 19 June 2021 Urbanskaya Tatyana 22 February 2018 Operation Crimea is Ours Ukrainian Independent Information Agency Kasatonov Chernomorskij flot byl placdarmom dlya anneksii Kryma Kasatonov the Black Sea Fleet was a springboard for the annexation of Crimea Current Time TV in Russian 13 March 2015 a b Oleksandr Turchynov 20 March 2014 Deklaraciya Pro borotbu za zvilnennya Ukrayini Declaration On the struggle for the liberation of Ukraine in Ukrainian Parliament of Ukraine Retrieved 24 April 2014 a b Fred Dews 19 March 2014 NATO Secretary General Russia s Annexation of Crimea Is Illegal and Illegitimate Brookings Retrieved 8 March 2015 a b c d Marxsen Christian 17 April 2014 The Crimea Crisis An International Law Perspective Heidelberg Journal of International Law SSRN 2520530 Retrieved 7 November 2014 Direct Line with Vladimir Putin kremlin ru 17 April 2014 Retrieved 17 April 2014 russian ukrainian friendship treaty UaWarExplained com 29 March 2022 Retrieved 29 March 2022 a b Bound by treaty Russia Ukraine and Crimea Deutsche Welle 11 March 2014 Retrieved 17 December 2020 Yeroshko Iryna 4 March 2014 Ukraine Russia shows complete disregard for Black Sea Fleet agreement in Crimea Kyiv Post Archived from the original on 5 March 2014 Dilanian Ken 3 March 2014 CIA reportedly says Russia sees treaty as justifying Ukraine moves Los Angeles Times Retrieved 12 March 2014 Constitution of the Russian Federation Official site 30 December 2008 Retrieved 3 January 2016 Opinion on Whether Draft Federal constitutional Law No 462741 6 on amending the Federal constitutional Law of the Russian Federation on the procedure of admission to the Russian Federation and creation of a new subject within the Russian Federation is compatible with international law Endorsed by the Venice Commission at Its 98th Plenary Session Venice 21 22 March 2014 Venice Commission 21 22 March 2014 Draft Federal Constitutional Law of the Russian Federation amending the Federal Constitutional Law on the Procedure of Admission to the Russian Federation and creation of a new subject of the Russian Federation in its composition of the Russian Federation translation 10 March 2014 Krym opredelilsya kakim sposobom vojdet v Rossiyu Crimea decided how to enter Russia Vedomosti in Russian 11 March 2014 Zakonoproekt 462741 6 O vnesenii izmenenij v Federalnyj konstitucionnyj zakon O poryadke prinyatiya v Rossijskuyu Federaciyu i obrazovaniya v ee sostave novogo subekta Rossijskoj Federacii v chasti rasshireniya predmeta pravovogo regulirovaniya nazvannogo Federalnogo konstitucionnogo zakona Draft Law No 462741 6 On Amendments to the Federal Constitutional Law On the Procedure for Admission to the Russian Federation and the Formation of a New Subject of the Russian Federation within it in terms of expanding the subject of legal regulation of the named Federal Constitutional Law duma gov ru in Russian Archived from the original on 3 November 2014 Retrieved 3 May 2014 Venice Commission gives damning verdict on Crimean Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group 22 March 2014 Retrieved 19 June 2021 CDL AD 2014 004 e Opinion on Whether Draft Federal constitutional Law No 462741 6 on amending the Federal constitutional Law of the Russian Federation on the procedure of admission to the Russian Federation and creation of a new subject within the Russian Federation is compatible with international law endorsed by the Venice Commission at its 98th Plenary Session Venice 21 22 March 2014 Venice Commission March 2014 Postanovlenie VR ARK Ob organizacii i provedenii respublikanskogo mestnogo referenduma po voprosam usovershenstvovaniya statusa i polnomochij Avtonomnoj Respubliki Krym Decree of the Verkhovna Rada of the Autonomous Republic of Crimea On organizing and holding a republican local referendum on improving the status and powers of the Autonomous Republic of Crimea rada crimea ua in Russian 9 March 2014 Archived from the original on 29 March 2014 Retrieved 10 April 2014 Aksenov perenos referenduma v Krymu svyazan s tem chto konflikt vyshel za predely razumnogo Aksyonov referendum postponement in Crimea is due to the fact that the conflict went beyond reasonable limits in Russian Interfax Sud priznal nezakonnymi naznachenie Aksenova premerom i provedenie referenduma v Krymu The court ruled that Aksenov s appointment as prime minister and the holding of a referendum in Crimea were illegal Ukrainian Independent Information Agency Retrieved 10 April 2014 Referendum v Krymu otvet net ne predusmotren Referendum in Crimea the answer no is not provided in Russian Voice of America Archived from the original on 5 March 2016 Retrieved 22 April 2014 Crimean authorities work under barrel of a gun Ukraine leader Reuters 6 March 2014 Retrieved 8 May 2014 KS priznal nekonstitucionnym postanovlenie o provedenii referenduma v Krymu Video The Constitutional Court declared unconstitutional the decision to hold a referendum in Crimea Video 14 March 2014 Myers Steven Lee Smale Alison 13 March 2014 Russian Troops Mass at Border With Ukraine The New York Times Collett White Mike Popeski Ronald 15 March 2014 Crimeans vote over 90 percent to quit Ukraine for Russia Reuters Crimea referendum Wide condemnation after region votes to split from Ukraine Fox News Fox News Channel 16 March 2014 Halimah Halimah 17 March 2014 Crimea s vote Was it legal CNN Retrieved 19 March 2014 Paul Roderick Gregory 5 May 2014 Putin s Human Rights Council Accidentally Posts Real Crimean Election Results Forbes Encyclopaedia Britannica Crimea quote In May 2014 a report from the Russian Presidential Council for Civil Society and Human Rights estimated that the actual turnout for the Crimean independence referendum may have been as low as 30 percent and that of those voters between 50 and 60 percent chose union with Russia Crimea referendum Voters back Russia union BBC News 16 March 2014 Declaring victory Crimean and Russian officials pledge fast integration Kyiv Post 17 March 2014 Archived from the original on 17 March 2014 Nablyudateli OBSE ne priedut na referendum v Krym OSCE observers won t monitor referendum in Crimea in Russian Deutsche Welle 11 March 2014 Retrieved 27 September 2021 Extreemrechtse partijen uitgenodigd op referendum Krim Far right parties invited to Crimea referendum in Dutch De Redactie 13 March 2014 Retrieved 12 June 2014 Referendum day in Crimea s Simferopol Deutsche Welle 16 March 2014 Retrieved 12 June 2014 Postanovlenie GS RK 1745 6 14 O nezavisimosti Kryma Resolution State Council Republic of Crimea 1745 6 14 On the independence of Crimea in Russian rada crimea ua 17 March 2014 Archived from the original on 19 March 2014 Parlament Kryma nacionaliziroval porty poluostrova i ih imushestvo The Parliament of Crimea nationalized the ports of the peninsula and their property in Russian nbnews com ua 17 March 2014 Archived from the original on 7 April 2014 Krym nacionaliziroval Chernomorneftegaz Crimea nationalized Chernomorneftegaz in Russian glavred info 17 March 2014 Crimea applies to be part of Russian Federation after vote to leave Ukraine The Guardian 17 March 2014 Herszenhorn David M Cowell Alan 17 March 2014 Lawmakers in Crimea Move Swiftly to Split From Ukraine The New York Times Retrieved 17 March 2014 Krym nachal proceduru prisoedineniya k RF obyaviv o nezavisimosti Crimea began the process of joining the Russian Federation declaring independence in Russian RIA Novosti 17 March 2014 Russian ruble announced Crimea s official currency Information Telegraph Agency of Russia 17 March 2014 Archived from the original on 1 December 2014 Verbyany Volodymyr 1 June 2014 Crimea Adopts Ruble as Ukraine Continues Battling Rebels Bloomberg Retrieved 25 June 2022 Putin Approves Draft Treaty On Crimea RadioFreeEurope RadioLiberty Retrieved 17 February 2021 Executive Order on recognising Republic of Crimea Kremlin 17 March 2014 Retrieved 17 March 2014 Myers Steven Lee Barry Ellen 18 March 2014 Putin Reclaims Crimea for Russia and Bitterly Denounces the West The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 19 June 2021 Ukraine crisis Putin signs Russia Crimea treaty BBC News 18 March 2014 Retrieved 19 June 2021 a b Dogovor mezhdu Rossijskoj Federaciej i Respublikoj Krym o prinyatii v Rossijskuyu Federaciyu Respubliki Krym i obrazovanii v sostave Rossijskoj Federacii novyh subektov Treaty between the Russian Federation and the Republic of Crimea on the acceptance of the Republic of Crimea into Russian Federation and education of new subjects of the Russian Federation in Russian Kremlin ru 18 March 2014 Retrieved 2 January 2016 and a PDF copy of signed document Constitutional Court Approves Russia Crimea Treaty The Moscow Times 19 March 2014 Retrieved 19 June 2021 Pifer Steven 18 March 2019 Five years after Crimea s illegal annexation the issue is no closer to resolution Brookings Institution Retrieved 19 June 2021 Conrad Naomi 1 May 2014 The deputy who voted against annexing Crimea Deutsche Welle Retrieved 19 June 2021 Rasporyazhenie Prezidenta Rossijskoj Federacii ot 17 March 2014 No 63 rp O podpisanii Dogovora mezhdu Rossijskoj Federaciej i Respublikoj Krym o prinyatii v Rossijskuyu Federaciyu Respubliki Krym i obrazovanii v sostave Rossijskoj Federacii novyh subektov Archived from the original on 18 March 2014 Retrieved 25 June 2016 Ukraine officer killed in attack on Crimea base BBC Retrieved 18 March 2014 Crimean police later said both Ukrainian and pro Russian forces had been fired on from a single location None of the accounts can be independently confirmed Crimean prosecutors do not confirm info on Simferopol shooter detention Interfax Ukraine Retrieved 15 July 2017 Roland Oliphant 22 March 2014 Ukraine s unlikeliest funeral the only two foes to die in Russia s Crimea takeover are mourned together The Daily Telegraph Archived from the original on 11 January 2022 Retrieved 2 January 2016 Joint Funeral2 Opposing sides in Crimean conflict come together today for Simferopol funeral of two men killed one Ukrainian the other Russian Kyiv Post 22 March 2014 Joint Funeral3 Funeral held for Crimea s first casualties Agence France Presse 22 March 2014 Lavrov Anton 2015 Russian Again The Military Operation for Crimea In Pukhov Ruslan ed Brothers Armed Military Aspects of the Crisis in Ukraine Second ed Minneapolis East View Press ISBN 9781879944657 OCLC 921141500 Ukraine orders Crimea troop withdrawal as Russia seizes naval base CNN 24 March 2014 Retrieved 24 March 2014 Defense Ministry 50 Of Ukrainian Troops in Crimea Defect To Russia Ukrainian News Agency 24 March 2014 Archived from the original on 26 March 2014 Retrieved 20 April 2014 Jonathan Marcus 24 March 2014 Ukrainian forces withdraw from Crimea BBC Retrieved 20 April 2014 in Ukrainian Russian troops captured all Ukrainian parts in the Crimea BBC Ukrainian 26 March 2014 United Nations News Centre Backing Ukraine s territorial integrity UN Assembly declares Crimea referendum invalid United Nations 27 March 2014 Retrieved 1 April 2014 Charbonneau Louis Donath Mirjam 27 March 2014 U N General Assembly declares Crimea secession vote invalid Reuters Edited by Chizu Nomiyama and Tom Brown Retrieved 1 April 2014 V 22 00 v Krymu i v Sevastopole strelki chasov perevedut na dva chasa vperyod na moskovskoe vremya At 22 00 in the Crimea and in Sevastopol the clock hands will be moved two hours ahead to Moscow time 29 March 2014 Retrieved 29 March 2014 Crimea to set clocks to Russia time Business Standard India 30 March 2014 via Business Standard kharkiv agreements UaWarExplained com 29 March 2022 Retrieved 29 March 2022 Rossiya denonsirovala soglasheniya s Ukrainoj o flote Russia denounced the agreements with Ukraine on the fleet BBC News Ukrainian in Russian 31 March 2014 Retrieved 19 June 2021 permanent dead link See Presidential explanatory note to the denunciation bill Archived 19 October 2017 at the Wayback Machine in Russian Lukas I Alpert Alexander Kolyandr Medvedev visits Crimea vows development aid Market Watch Crimea switches to Russian telephone codes Interfax Ukraine 7 May 2015 Nikiforov Vadim 12 March 2014 Krym i Sevastopol ozhidayut predstavleniya svyshe Crimea and Sevastopol await submission from above Kommersant in Russian Retrieved 23 April 2014 Sputnik 11 April 2014 Crimean Parliament Approves New Constitution ria ru Nezamyatnyj Ivan 11 April 2014 Krym propisalsya v konstitucii Rossii Crimea registered in the Russian constitution in Russian mk ru, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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