A representative of Ukraine's Ministry of Foreign
Affairs claims that the fact that Ukraine hasn't approved the candidacy of
Mikhail Babich as Russia's ambassador to Ukraine does not mean a full
diplomatic break.
"No, it has nothing to do with a full break in
our diplomatic relations with Russia. Most of all, we should be aware that
there are three million Ukrainians in Russia," the ministry's political
director Oleksiy Makeyev said on Radio Liberty on Friday. "Each day our
Consulate in Moscow gets requests for consular assistance from over 300
Ukrainians... I am not even talking that there are over two dozen political
prisoners in the Russian Federation," he added.
"In March 2014, Ukraine recalled its ambassador
[from Moscow], and for more than two years, Ukraine in Moscow has been
represented by its temporary charge d'affaires. From now on, the situation at
the Russian Embassy will be the same: a temporary charge d'affaires has been
appointed – this is a senior diplomat, who will be tasked to maintain those
rare contacts existing in Ukraine-Russia relations today," he said.
As UNIAN reported, on July 28, Russian President
Vladimir Putin relieved Mikhail Zurabov of his duties as Russian Ambassador
Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary to Kyiv, the post he occupied since August 5,
2009. Sergei Toropov was appointed as Russian charge d'affaires in Ukraine.
Russian presidential spokesman Dmitry Peskov announced on July 29 that Russia
had requested an approval for the appointment of Mikhail Babich, the
presidential representative in Russia's Volga (Privolzhsky) Federal District as
Russia's ambassador to Ukraine.
On August 3, Ukrainian Deputy Minister of Foreign
Affairs for European Integration Olena Zerkal said that the appointment of
Russia's Ambassador to Ukraine is no longer on Ukraine's agenda. Makeyev in
turn stressed that selecting candidates for an ambassador's position is not a
public process.
"I don't remember a single case when the
candidacy of an ambassador was actively discussed on the front pages of
newspapers before a president decided to appoint the ambassador. As common
reputation risks exist. If a country declines to approve the candidate,
respectively, the Kremlin and Moscow will have reputation risks. And the person
who was nominated will have a certain label on him," Makeyev said.
In his words, for some reasons, Moscow "decided
not to follow the diplomatic rules and violated all the procedures, thus facing
the reality."
"Neither a candidacy nor a position of the
ambassador is priority. The priority is that Russia should cease aggression,
put an end to the illegal occupation to improve the Ukrainian-Russian relations
in any way possible. It's about the content rather than personality," he
added. While commenting on Babich's nomination, he said: "I do not know
whether it was an attempt to humiliate Kyiv, but it is clear that Kyiv was able
to handle the situation with dignity." He also confirmed that Russia had
not sent Ukraine's Foreign Ministry any request for the approval of the
ambassador in the form of a diplomatic note.
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