Zelensky calls for new sanctions – Ukraine plans to rebuild settlements

Volodymyr Zelensky

Ukraine’s President is calling on Western allies to take further punitive measures against Russia.

(Photo: dpa)

Kyiv Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has called for a further tightening of sanctions against Moscow after renewed Russian attacks on civilian targets. “A local history museum and surrounding houses became the target of the terrorists,” he said in his evening video address on Tuesday.

Two people were killed and ten injured in a rocket attack on the city of Kupyansk in northeastern Ukraine earlier this morning. An international group of experts has drawn up a document aimed at tightening sanctions against Russia, Zelensky said.

“This sanctions document will be on the desks of all the major leaders in the world – political, public and business,” the President said. The sanctions are aimed at the Russian oil and gas sector, but also at the nuclear industry and also hit those who help Russia to circumvent the existing sanctions.

Demands: lower oil price cap, embargo on metals

Zelensky referred to the “Action Plan 2.0” presented by the head of his presidential office on Tuesday. Above all, it calls for a reduction in the maximum price for the purchase of Russian oil of the Urals brand from 60 to 45 US dollars (the equivalent of around 41 euros) per barrel.

According to estimates from Kiev, the Russian production costs are currently around 30 US dollars. Urals oil traded above $60 in Moscow on Tuesday. Russia had declared that it did not want to sell below the market price.

Oil tanker off the Russian coast

The oil price cap for Russian oil is currently 60 US dollars per barrel.

(Photo: AP)

In addition, import taxes for Russian oil and natural gas are to be introduced by the states of the western sanctions coalition. The proceeds are intended to help finance the planned post-war reconstruction of Ukraine. In addition, an embargo on Russian metals and diamonds is to be imposed.

Ukraine also criticizes the fact that semiconductors important for Russia’s defense industry continue to reach the neighboring country via third countries. Exports to China alone more than doubled in 2022. Kiev is therefore demanding punitive measures against companies that circumvent export bans.

Ukraine wants to completely rebuild six places destroyed by war

However, the Ukrainian government also presented its own development plans. In a pilot project, six villages destroyed in the war are to be restored according to the latest technical and ecological standards. Prime Minister Denys Schmyhal announced at a cabinet meeting on Tuesday that they would be rebuilt “better than before”. Among the settlements is the Kiev suburb of Borodyanka, temporarily occupied by Russian troops, whose ruins have become a symbol of Russia’s destructive war of aggression against Ukraine.

Schmyhal promised that if the experiment was successful, other towns would be built on the same pattern. The money will come from a reconstruction fund. According to Ukrainian censuses, more than 130,000 homes and more than 17,000 apartment buildings have been damaged or destroyed since the Russian invasion 14 months ago.

Lavrov worries about freedom of the press in the US

Meanwhile, the separation of the US broadcaster Fox News from its right-wing moderator Tucker Carlson, who is known for government scolding and false allegations, was used by Russia’s Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov to tip the United States. One can only speculate about the background to this, he said on Tuesday in New York during a visit to the UN headquarters. But it makes sense to reflect on the state of diversity of opinion in the US, which “clearly suffered from it,” Lavrov claimed.

Sergey Lavrov

The Russian foreign minister is said to be worried about freedom of the press in the US, but things are far worse in Russia.

(Photo: dpa)

However, a lack of media freedom and diversity of opinion in Russia is a much bigger problem, as the Press Freedom Index from Reporters Without Borders shows: it ranks Russia 155th out of 180 countries, while the US ranks 42nd.

Renewed criticism of grain agreements

In addition, Lavrov also referred to the grain agreement with Ukraine brokered with UN help. The Russian chief diplomat confirmed UN Secretary-General António Guterres’ good will to implement the agreement, but “there are practically no results”. Russia keeps threatening to scrap the grain agreement, which was last extended by 60 days in mid-March.

After the start of its war of aggression, Russia had blocked the neighboring country’s Black Sea ports for months. As Ukraine is one of the largest agricultural exporters, fears grew of a massive increase in food prices and – as a result – a hunger crisis in the poorest countries. Last summer, the United Nations and Turkey then brokered an end to the blockade and made the grain deal possible.

This is how the Handelsblatt reports on the Ukraine war:

What will be important on Wednesday

In Ukraine, the Chernobyl disaster is one year old. On April 26, 1986, a reactor at the Chernobyl nuclear power plant exploded. Thousands of people were killed and injured, tens of thousands of people were forcibly relocated, and a radioactive cloud swept across Europe.

Although no official dates have been announced on the occasion of the date, the leadership in Kiev will probably use it for commemorative events – especially since there are concerns about the security of the Zaporizhia nuclear power plant, which is still controlled by Russian units.

More: Current news on the development of the Ukraine war can be found in our news blog

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