Next Story
Newszop

EU, Britain slap new sanctions on Russia without US, target Russia's 'shadow fleet'

Send Push
BRUSSELS/LONDON: The EU and Britain announced new sanctions against Russia on Tuesday without waiting for the United States to join them, a day after President Donald Trump's phone call with Vladimir Putin failed to elicit a promise for a ceasefire in Ukraine.

London and Brussels said their new measures would zero in on Moscow's "shadow fleet" of oil tankers and financial companies that have helped it avoid the impact of other sanctions imposed over the war.

"Sanctions matter, and I am grateful to everyone who makes them more tangible for the perpetrators of the war," Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelensky wrote on Telegram.

The sanctions were unveiled without an immediate announcement of corresponding steps from Washington, despite intense public lobbying from leaders of European countries for the Trump administration to join them. "We have repeatedly made it clear that we expect one thing from Russia - an immediate ceasefire without preconditions," German foreign minister Johann Wadephul said on the sidelines of a meeting with his EU counterparts in Brussels. As Russia had not accepted a ceasefire, "we will have to react," he said. "We also expect our US allies not to tolerate this."

Trump told reporters on Tuesday that he was deliberating over what actions to take, but gave no further detail.

"We're looking at a lot of things, but we'll see," Trump said as he left a meeting on Capitol Hill in Washington.

Russia and Ukraine held their first direct talks in more than three years on Friday at Trump's behest, but failed to agree a truce after Moscow presented conditions that a member of the Ukrainian delegation called "non-starters".

Ukraine says it is ready for an immediate ceasefire proposed by Trump, while Russia says it wants talks first. The Europeans say this is proof that Putin, who started the war by invading his neighbour in 2022, is not prepared to end it. European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen said she had spoken to Zelensky and that a further package of sanctions was being prepared.

Russian foreign ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova told reporters that Russia would never bow to what she called ultimatums.

Loving Newspoint? Download the app now