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News, October 2009

 
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Editorial Note: The following news reports are summaries from original sources. They may also include corrections of Arabic names and political terminology. Comments are in parentheses.

 

Putin cautions EU over Ukraine's gas paying issue

    MOSCOW, Nov. 1, 2009 (Xinhua) --

Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin warned his Swedish counterpart Fredrik Reinfeldt, rotating president of the European Union (EU), on Sunday that Ukraine might again have difficulty paying for Russian natural gas.

    During a telephone conversation, Putin urged EU attention to possible problems in Ukraine's payment for Russian gas, news agencies quoted the Russian government's press office as saying.

    "Thus, problems may arise in transit of Russian gas to Europe via Ukraine," said the press office.

    Putin was reassured by Reinfeldt, whose country currently holds the rotating EU presidency, that he would notify the European Commission of Russia's concerns.

    On Friday Putin had already held a telephone conversation with his Ukrainian counterpart Yulia Tymoshenko over the issue, saying that "it seems we are again seeing problems with the payment of our energy supplies (from Ukraine)."

    Russia supplies a quarter of EU's gas needs, with 80 percent of it pumped through Ukrainian pipelines. The energy supplier cut off gas shipments to Ukraine for nearly two weeks in January over disputes on pricing and transition fees.

Editor: Yan

Putin warns EU of possible Ukrainian gas payment problems

MOSCOW, November 1, 2009 (RIA Novosti) -

Russia's prime minister on Sunday briefed his Swedish counterpart, the current EU president, about possible problems with Ukrainian payment for Russian gas and its transit to European consumers, a spokesman said.

The Russian government spokesperson said Vladimir Putin spoke by telephone to Fredrik Reinfeldt, whose country holds the rotating EU presidency, and was reassured by that the Swedish prime minister would bring Russia's concerns to the attention of the European Commission.

"During the meeting, Vladimir Putin focused the attention of the EU leadership on signals coming in, including through official channels from Kiev, regarding potential problems with payment for gas supplies," the official said.

Putin warned that payment problems could lead to difficulties for European consumers receiving Russian gas via Ukraine. A dispute between Moscow and Kiev at the start of the year over gas debts and 2009 deliveries left millions of Europeans without gas in January.

The Russian prime minister said on Friday that his Ukrainian counterpart, Yulia Tymoshenko, had told him by telephone that President Viktor Yushchenko was blocking payments for Russian gas supplies.

Putin also said the European Union had not lent Ukraine any money to pay for Russian gas. European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso said on Friday he hoped Russia and Ukraine will resolve gas issues on their own without EU mediation.

Kiev on Friday rejected Putin's comments, with the Ukrainian president's representative for international energy security issues Bohdan Sokolovsky calling them "unfriendly."

"On July 30, the European Commission and three honorable international financial institutions published a joint statement on a $1.7 billion loan to buy Russian gas. However, the head of the Ukrainian government is still slow at fulfilling the conditions in order for these funds to be transferred," Ukraine's presidential press service quoted Sokolovskiy as saying.

Kiev asked the EU for a $4.2 billion loan to pump Russian gas into its underground storages in order to avoid problems with gas transit to Europe.

"The EU has not given Ukraine any money," Putin told leaders of his United Russia party on Friday. "Ukraine has not received a single cent, not one hryvnia."

The January standoff was resolved after negotiations between Putin and Tymoshenko that led to Russian energy giant Gazprom and Ukrainian state energy company Naftogaz signing new contracts on deliveries to Ukraine and gas transit to Europe.

That deal has been consistently opposed by Yushchenko, who has repeatedly called for the contracts to be revised, saying that Naftogaz had lost at least $2.5 billion from Russian natural gas transit.

Tymoshenko and Yushchenko were political allies during the "orange revolution" that swept the president to power, but have become bitter rivals and are both running in January's presidential elections.





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