Crimean parliament formally applies to join Russia

Crimean parliament formally applies to join Russia

Pro-Russian people celebrate in Simferopol, Crimea (17 March 2014)Thousands celebrated the results in Crimean towns on Sunday night
Crimea's parliament has formally declared independence from Ukraine and asked to join the Russian Federation.
It follows Sunday's controversial referendum which officials say overwhelmingly backed leaving Ukraine.
The government in Kiev has said it will not recognise the results. The US and EU say the vote was illegal and have vowed to impose sanctions on Moscow.
The Crimean peninsula has been under the control of pro-Russia forces since late February.
Moscow says the troops are pro-Russian self-defence forces and not under its direct control.
The crisis follows the ousting of Ukraine's pro-Moscow president Viktor Yanukovych on 22 February, following months of street protests and deadly clashes.
The BBC's Ben Brown says a "huge number of people in the minority population" abstained from Sunday's vote
Ukraine's interim Prime Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk has called the vote "a circus performance" which had been backed up by "21,000 Russian troops, who with their guns are trying to prove the legality of the referendum".

Crimea's declaration

According to the declaration approved by Crimean MPs, the region:
  • becomes an independent state and applies to formally join Russia, with some autonomy
  • will adopt the Russia rouble as its currency within a month
  • will move to Moscow time (GMT+4 and two hours ahead of Kiev time) on 30 March
  • will offer Crimean soldiers the chance to join Russian military
The vote was boycotted by many among Crimea's minority Ukrainian and Tatar population, and the election process has been widely criticised.
Meanwhile, the Ukrainian parliament in Kiev has formally approved the partial mobilisation of 40,000 reservists, in response to what it called the "war-time situation".
Interim President Oleksandr Turchynov described the referendum as a "great farce" which "will never be recognised either by Ukraine or by the civilised world".
According to the vote in Crimea's parliament on Monday, Ukrainian laws now no longer apply in the region and all Ukrainian state property belongs to an independent Crimea.
Crimean Tatars and Ukrainians protest in SimferopolCrimean Tatars say they want the peninsula to stay with Ukraine, fearing further deportations
Empty polling station in Bakhchisaray, Crimea (16 March 2014)Many Tatars said they were refusing to take part in the poll, which did not give the option of maintaining the status quo
Pro-Russian troops in Perevalnoye, outside Simferopol (17 March 2014)Thousands of pro-Russian troops - which Moscow denies are under its control - have been active in Crimea since late February
The region will adopt the Russian currency, the rouble, and will move to Moscow time - two hours ahead - by the end of March.
The document approved by MPs also appealed to "all countries of the world to recognise it as an independent state".
The Crimean peninsula, which borders Ukraine and Russia, has been under the control of pro-Russian armed forces since late February.
Russia officially insists the troops are not under its command but are pro-Russia self defence forces. Kiev says Crimea - which has a majority ethnic Russian population - is under military occupation.
Tatar boycott
The referendum on breaking from Ukraine and joining Russia was called by the Crimean parliament in early March, with voters asked to choose between joining Russia, or having greater autonomy within Ukraine.
There was no option for those who wanted the constitutional arrangements to remain unchanged.
Daniel Sandford reports from Crimea: ''Wild scenes in Simferopol''
Ukraine's chief electoral official, Mikhail Malyshev, said the vote was nearly 97% in favour of joining the Russian Federation, with a turnout of 83%.
But Crimea's Tatar population - about 12% of the population - said they would boycott the vote, fearing their lives would be worse under the Kremlin.
The Tatars were deported to Central Asia by Soviet dictator Joseph Stalin in 1944. They were only able to return with the fall of the Soviet Union and many want to remain in Ukraine.
Many ethnic Ukrainians - who make up 24% of the population - also said they would not vote.

Crisis timeline

  • 21 Nov 2013: President Viktor Yanukovych abandons an EU deal
  • Dec: Pro-EU protesters occupy Kiev city hall and Independence Square
  • 20-21 Feb 2014: At least 88 people killed in Kiev clashes
  • 22 Feb: Mr Yanukovych flees; parliament removes him and calls election
  • 27-28 Feb: Pro-Russian gunmen seize key buildings in Crimea
  • 6 Mar: Crimea's parliament votes to join Russia
  • 16 Mar: Crimea voters choose to secede in disputed referendum
  • 17 Mar: Crimean parliament declares independence and formally applies to join Russia
EU foreign ministers meeting in Brussels are discussing the bloc's response, including imposing a visa ban and an asset freeze against a number of Russian officials.
The bloc has already suspended talks on an economic pact with Russia and an easing of visa restrictions.
Speaking in Brussels, EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton said the "so-called referendum" was "illegal under the constitution of Ukraine and under international law".
"I call upon Russia yet again to meet with Ukrainian leaders and to start a dialogue with them, and to try to move to de-escalation, please, as quickly as possible. We've seen no evidence of that," she told reporters.
She said the EU "can't simply sit back and say this situation can be allowed to happen", but that ministers needed to think carefully about what their response should be.
The White House has described Russia's actions in Crimea as "dangerous and destabilizing", and said the international community would not recognise the results of a poll "administered under threats of violence".
US President Barack Obama has warned Moscow that Washington is also ready to impose "costs" over its actions in Ukraine.     BBC

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