Putin approves EU deal to turn on gasInternational monitors to check supply gauges in Ukraine pumping stations
By Denis Dyomkin in Moscow and Huw Jones in Brussels
Moscow has agreed to the deployment of international monitors to oversee the transit of Russian gas to EU countries via Ukraine, clearing the way for the resumption of European gas supplies, the Czech EU presidency announced last night.
Earlier, a senior Czech official said Russia's gas exporting monopoly, Gazprom, had baulked at a deal, insisting that Russian monitors be allowed inside Ukraine, which it claims is stealing gas piped to EU markets across its territory. The breakthrough came after talks between the Czech Prime Minister, Mirek Topolanek, and German and Russian leaders.
"This deployment should lead to the Russian supplies of gas to EU member states being restored," the EU said. There was no mention of any timeframe for deploying monitoring teams, nor did it say when supplies might be restored.
The talks were aimed at ending the row that has seen Russian gas supplies to Europe cut off, leaving hundreds of thousands of people in the Balkans without gas, forced factories to shut down and disrupted deliveries as far west as France and Germany – a situation the European Commission has described as completely unacceptable. Russia and Ukraine have yet to agree a price for Russian gas deliveries, which had been subsidised since Soviet times.
Earlier, Moscow said it would only restore gas supplies to Europe through Ukraine once international monitors were in place and told Kiev it must pay the going market rate for its energy. The Russian Prime Minister, Vladimir Putin, said a "collapse" of government and high-level corruption in Ukraine were partly to blame for the crisis.
"In order to restore normal flows, [Ukraine] needs to come to Moscow and sign a contract for gas supplies to Ukraine," Mr Putin said. "And they need to pay for the product they receive. At the market price ... our Ukrainian partners don't want to sign and don't want to pay. That's it."
The dispute between Kiev and its former Soviet master follows tensions over Ukraine's efforts to join Nato, a move bitterly opposed by Moscow and viewed with wariness even by European members of the alliance and by investors. For months, Ukraine has been beset by squabbling between President Viktor Yushchenko and his former ally, Prime Minister Yulia Tymoshenko, notably over ties with Russia.
Russia cut off gas for Ukraine's domestic consumption on 1 January in a row over pricing and debts, a dispute Mr Putin said was now damaging Russia's image. The EC President, Jose Manuel Barroso, urged a speedy end to the row, which has cut supplies to thousands of homes at the height of a bitter winter.
Independent