Russian President Vladimir Putin has blamed Kyiv for the latest burst of fighting in Ukraine’s restive east.
Putin made the accusation on the second of a three-day trip to Crimea – the peninsula Russia annexed from Ukraine last year.
The visit has angered Kyiv, which still considers the Black Sea region Ukrainian.
However, the Russian president praised the 2014 takeover as a matter of historic justice.
It’s a view not shared by the West. Sanctions slapped on to Moscow following the annexation have cost the Russian economy dearly.
They aggravated an economic crisis in the country, which is suffering from weak oil prices and a rapid devaluation of its rouble national currency. Russia is also struggling under curbed technology transfers from the West, which are crucial to its future development.
Interethnic relations
The official purpose of the trip is to promote tourism in Crimea, but Putin also used the occasion to meet with the area’s minority groups, including the Tat