EU agrees to extend Russia economic sanctions by six months
European Union governments agreed June 17 to extend economic sanctions on Russia over its actions in Ukraine by six months until Jan. 31, diplomats said, maintaining unity in the West's tough stance toward Moscow.
The six-month extension was agreed by ambassadors from the 28 EU nations meeting in Brussels.
Ratification of the decision by EU foreign ministers meeting in Luxembourg on Monday is expected to be a formality. The procedure means there will be no formal motion on Russia at an EU leaders' summit in Brussels at the end of next week.
Russian media quoted Finance Minister Anton Siluanov as saying that Moscow had already taken an extension of the measures into account in its economic planning.
The sanctions on Russia's energy, defense and financial sectors, originally imposed in July 2014 for one year, were the EU's toughest response to Moscow's annexation of Ukraine's Crimea region and what the EU said was Russia's support for separatists in eastern Ukraine.
Russia responded by banning imports of most food from the West. The United States has also imposed sanctions on Moscow.
The extension of EU measures comes amid renewed fighting between pro-Russian separatists and Ukrainian troops in eastern Ukraine, in violation of February's Minsk ceasefire agreement, and as Russia and the West again step up recriminations.
It maintains Western unity on sanctions towards Russia despite the reservations that some EU members openly express about the wisdom of imposing sanctions on the bloc's major energy supplier.
Group of Seven leaders meeting in Germany last week said they could step up sanctions against Moscow if violence in Ukraine escalated. U.S. officials said before that meeting that President...
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