European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen
The European Union is proposing a ban on all oil imports from Russia, saying president Vladimir Putin âmust pay a high priceâ for his âbrutal aggressionâ against Ukraine.
European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen on Wednesday announced plans for a phased oil embargo as well as sanctions against Moscowâs top bank in a bid to deepen Russiaâs isolation.
The bloc intends to stop buying supplies of Russian crude oil within six months and refined products by the end of the year, she added. It has already decided to implement a full ban on Russian coal this year, but has not yet taken steps against Russian natural gas supplies.
âToday, we will propose to ban all Russian oil from Europe,â Ms von der Leyen told the European Parliament in Strasbourg. âThis will be a complete import ban on all Russia,â she said to applause in the chamber.
The plan, if agreed by EU governments, would mark a watershed for the worldâs largest trading bloc, which is dependent on Russian energy and must find alternative supplies.
However, Ms von der Leyen has conceded that it will be difficult for the plan to gain unanimous support. This is because some nations, including Hungary and Slovakia, have indicated they will not agree to such a move. It is unclear whether these countries will be given an exemption by the EU.
âWe are addressing our dependency on Russian oil. And letâs be clear, it will not be easy because some member states are strongly dependent on Russian oil, but we simply have to do it,â she said.
The difficulty of reaching a consensus was made clear by the Czech trade minister Jozef Sikela, who complained on Wednesday that the policy lacked a plan for burden-sharing.
âThe proposal does not include...how the gap will be distributed, meaning how to share it fairly, and a proposal on joint purchases and joint distribution,â he told Reuters. âWe are still studying it, but it is a problem for me.â
The bloc also plans to remove Sberbank from the Swift financial transfer system and hopes to target three Russian-state broadcasters, which Ms Von der Leyen called âmouthpieces that amplify Putinâs lies and propaganda aggressivelyâ.
The European Commission president also said the EU should sanction Russian soldiers âwho committed war crimes in Buchaâ, the Kyiv suburb where hundreds of bodies were discovered after the withdrawal of the Kremlinâs forces from the area.
âThis sends another important signal to all perpetrators of the Kremlinâs war: we know who you are. We will hold you accountable. Youâre not getting away with this,â Ms von der Leyen said.
Responding to the EUâs proposed sixth round of sanctions against Russia, Oleg Ustenko, Ukraine president Volodymyr Zelenskyâs chief economic advisor, said the bloc should do much more to deter Russia.
ââUkrainians have watched in disbelief as our partners in the European Union continued to purchase Russian fossil fuels, funding war crimes in our country to the tune of âŹ1billion every day,â he said.
âWe now finally see action. Yet still, companies are trading Russian fossil fuels, shipping and piping huge quantities of Russian oil, gas and coal around the world. We have a simple message for these companies â we are watching you. Ukraine will not forget who those who supported us, nor will we forget those who chose Putinâs side.â
Meanwhile, Mike Davis, the chief executive of the NGO Global Witness, said the EUâs measures âtotally fail to match either the immediacy or scale of the problemâ. He added that the ban must happen sooner and should also target Russian gas.
Source: Independent
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