VILNIUS, Lithuania (AP) Lithuania's prime minister is pointing to a Russian ban on dairy products from his country as evidence that Moscow fears losing influence over Ukraine and other former Soviet states. And he's wondering how far Russia will go in punishing countries it thinks are wooing those nations
Lithuanian PM: Russia trying to reassert power
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Russia has imposed tremendous pressure on Ukraine not to sign a strategic partnership deal with the EU, saying Moscow would retaliate with trade restrictions that could push the ex-Soviet republic toward default.
In August, Russia began a series of rigorous border control checks that caused crossing delays and millions of dollars of losses for Ukrainian businessmen.
Other nations have not escaped Russia's wrath, either. In September, Russia imposed a ban on imports of Moldovan wine after that country's leaders expressed a willingness to sign a partnership deal with the EU at the same summit in Lithuania.
Finally, on Monday, Russia's top consumer watchdog, Rospotrebnadzor, issued a decree barring the import of a range of Lithuanian dairy products. It's a ban that hurts many producers in the country.
"Some of those diary companies sell 80 percent of their production to Russia," the Lithuanian prime minister told AP. "Today milk. Tomorrow meat. Then what?"
Lithuania, a country of 3 million people, has appealed to the EU to intervene, and Butkevicius said he hopes the dairy companies' losses will be covered by EU funds.
He denied speculation that Lithuania might react by imposing restrictions on Russian goods and passengers moving across its territory. But he also gave no indication that Lithuania would cease its outreach to Ukraine.
"We are not going to war. Our task is to collect data, use our negotiators in Moscow, and act within the framework of the (World Trade Organization). We already feel that we have the backing of the EU," Butkevicius said.
Moscow, meanwhile, denies the dairy ban has anything to do with Ukraine and the upcoming EU summit.
"This topic has absolutely nothing to do with politics. It's an old topic having to do with the fact that a number of Lithuanian companies make dairy products that don't meet Russia's standards," Sergei Glazyev, a Kremlin insider, told the Ekho Moskvy radio station Thursday.
Glazyev, a top adviser to President Vladimir Putin on the Customs Union, in September warned Ukraine that Moscow might impose duties on Ukrainian goods if it were to keep strengthening its ties to the EU.
Glazyev also said Thursday that Russia might also impose a visa regime on Ukrainians traveling to countries that are part of the Customs Union. Currently Ukrainians can travel to Russia without a visa.