国际英语新闻:Russia hands out first passports to Crimean residents
MOSCOW, March 19 (Xinhua) -- Moscow has begun to issue Russian passports to residents in Crimea as the peninsula has signed an accession treaty with Russia, head of Russian Federal Migration Service (FMS) said Wednesday.
"The treaty was signed yesterday. Its temporary application started yesterday and, of course, all Crimean residents who applied to the Federal Migration Service will get passports. This work has started. Some of the passports were issued today," Konstantin Romodanovsky was quoted by Itar-Tass news agency as saying.
He did not elaborate how many people have applied for Russian passports, but voiced belief that the intensity of issuing documents would grow each day.
Romodanovsky also said Russia was concerned by symptoms of a growing "humanitarian catastrophe" in Ukraine.
"As a sign, the number of elderly people and children entering Russia has grown twofold," he said, adding that the number of Ukrainians crossing the Russian border without any clear purpose was also increasing.
He did not give exact figures or periods of which he was comparing.
"This only strengthens our fears," Romodanovsky said, noting that the FMS has shared those concerns with the UN High Commissioner for Refugees about the worsening humanitarian situation in Ukraine.
Russian President Vladimir Putin on Tuesday signed the treaty with leaders of Crimea to accept the Republic of Crimea and the city of Sevastopol as part of Russian territory. Crimea, a Ukrainian autonomous republic, held a referendum on Sunday, with some 96.6 percent of voters opting for joining Russia.
The referendum capped months of political unrest triggered by the Ukrainian government's decision in November not to sign an agreement on broader European integration.
相关文章
- 欧美文化:Sri Lankan military authorized to maintain law, order amid unrest
- 欧美文化:Russian FM visits Algeria to mark 60th anniversary of ties
- 欧美文化:Turkey, Kazakhstan aim to reach 10 bln USD in bilateral trade: president
- 欧美文化:Macron visits Berlin on first foreign trip after re-election
- 欧美文化:Serbia, China commemorate journalists killed in NATO bombing 23 years ago
- 欧美文化:UN chief calls for end to "cycle of death, destruction" in Ukraine
- 欧美文化:Nearly 15 mln deaths directly or indirectly linked to COVID-19: WHO
- 欧美文化:Killings in U.S. Los Angeles on pace to top last year's high: media
- 欧美文化:South Sudan ceasefire may unravel due to hostilities: monitors
- 欧美文化:Zambia launches mechanism to accelerate private sector development