Paul
Goble
Staunton, May 28 – Following its
victory at the UN arbitration court that ruled Russia must release the 28
Ukrainian sailors it illegally seized and still holds, the Ukrainian government
has announced that it will seek to gain worldwide recognition of the fact that
the Kerch Strait is in fact an international waterway and not the internal
waters of Russia as Moscow insists.
Yelena Zerkal, Ukraine’s deputy
foreign minister, said that such a step would eliminate the legal uncertainties
which arose after Russia illegally annexed Crimea in 2014 and that Kyiv would
take it even though Russian officials have already indicated that they will
oppose any change (ru.krymr.com/a/mejdunarodnyi-status-kerchenskogo-proliva-rossiya-ukraina/29968697.html).
Katerina Zelenko,
a spokesperson for the Ukrainian foreign minister, says that “Ukraine has
always insisted [on such a status] while Russia in denying it has sometimes
acted as if the straits were an international waterway and sometimes not. This
creates confusion, and Ukraine wants to do what it can to end it.
She added that in
her view, “international status for the Kerch Straits does not contract the
2003 agreement between Russia and Ukraine on cooperation in the use of the Sea
of Azov. This agreement has its own
function,” but it supplements rather than contradicts the UN Law of the Sea
Convention.
According to that agreement, Zelenko
continues, “the Sea of Azov and the Kerch Strait are the internal waters of the
two state,” using the definitions established by the Law of the Sea. But subsequent events have changed the
conditions that obtained at that time as have Russian declarations and actions.
Not all Ukrainians agree with this proposal.
Bogdan Yeremenko, head of the Foreign Affairs Maidan Foundation, says he does
not support making this proposal. “The Kerch Strait is the territorial waters
of Ukraine. If we see to return Crimea to within Ukrainian control, why should we
change that status?”
He adds that there is no possibility
of discussing the status of the sea and the straits because that would require
raising the issue of the status of Crimea, something Moscow has consistently
refused to do. Issuing a call for a change when there is little or no possibility
for forward movement does not help the Ukrainian cause, Yeremenko suggests.
No comments:
Post a Comment