Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Ukraine expands border restrictio­ns

- DARYNA KRASNOLUTS­KA Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Henry Meyer of Bloomberg News.

Ukraine tightened control over its border, imposing new entry restrictio­ns for foreigners and banning Russian men after President Petro Poroshenko introduced martial law and warned that the Kremlin may be preparing an invasion.

The ban on men aged 16 to 60 intensifie­d tensions between the former Soviet neighbors that flared up this week when Russian warships fired on Ukrainian vessels before seizing them and capturing two dozen sailors. After the incident in the Kerch Strait off the coast of Crimea, which Russia seized with its military in 2014, Ukraine declared a state of martial law for 30 days.

“As of today, the entrance of foreigners is limited, first of all for citizens of Russia,” Petro Tsygykal, the head of state border guard service, told Poroshenko on Friday, according to a statement on the presidenti­al website.

The border service has increased the number of troops on the frontiers with Russia and Crimea, Tsygykal said. That came after a warning from Poroshenko that Ukrainian intelligen­ce services had ascertaine­d Russia was amassing tanks and ships across the border and there was a “threat of full-scale war.”

Poroshenko said the entry ban and other measures will hamper Russia from “forming squads of private armies that are representa­tives of Russian official troops and will not allow them to carry out operations, which they tried to do in 2014.”

Poroshenko said he is also seeking to tighten the registrati­on process for Russian citizens who are already in Ukraine, especially in the 10 regions along the border where martial law is in effect.

Moscow has decided that mirroring the Ukrainian ban in retaliatio­n doesn’t make sense, Russian Foreign Ministry spokesman Maria Zakharova said.

 ?? AP/ALEXANDER ZEMLIANICH­ENKO ?? Andrei Merkuriev of the Bolshoi Theater said Friday in Moscow that he was barred from entering Ukraine under Ukraine’s ban on men aged 16 to 60.
AP/ALEXANDER ZEMLIANICH­ENKO Andrei Merkuriev of the Bolshoi Theater said Friday in Moscow that he was barred from entering Ukraine under Ukraine’s ban on men aged 16 to 60.

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