Published 08:54 IST, February 24th 2022
Putin orders military operation in Ukraine's Donbass aimed at ‘demilitarising’ Ukraine
Putin on Thursday, ordered a military operation in Ukraine's Donbass region as UNSC pleaded Russia to stop troops from attacking Ukraine, give peace a chance
- World News
- 2 min read
As UN General Secretary Antonio Gutteres urges Russian President Vladimir Putin to stop his troops from attacking Ukraine, Putin on Thursday, ordered a special military operation in Ukraine's Donbas region, as per Russia Today (RT). Putin re-iterated that Russia does not plan to occupy Ukraine and that its military action is to 'demilitarize' Ukraine. He also urged Ukrainian troops in Donbas to give up their weapons and 'go home'.
Putin orders military action on Donbas
Putin has also said that it is 'inevitable' that there will be fighting between Russian and Ukrainian soldiers, as per RT. He has also warned foreign powers that intervene in the Ukraine conflict of consequences they have not seen before. These statements come amid UNSC meeting where most European nations and NATO nations have backed Ukraine, condemning Russia's military action.
UNSC urges Russia to stop invasion
Addressing the Emergency UN Security Council meeting, UN general secretary António Guterres said, "In recent past, situations with similar events and rumours had arisen. I thought nothing serious would come out of it, I was wrong. President Putin, stop your troops from invading Ukraine. Give peace a chance". Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has tried to reach out to Putin via phone, but did not get any answer. Ukraine has imposed a national emergency and shut down its entire airspace, citing 'potential hazard'.
Russia-Ukraine crisis
For weeks, Moscow has massed over 150,000 troops on Ukraine's borders in a bid to pressurise Western nations to not allow Ukraine to join NATO, threatening an invasion. With US imposing sanctions on Russian-controlled companies, two Russian banks and preventing Russia from accessing Western financial institutions, Russia recognised two rebel regions of Ukraine (Luhansk and Donetsk) as independent and ordered Russian troops there for “peacekeeping”. Other Western allies, including the European Union, the United Kingdom, Australia, Canada, and Japan, have also imposed sanctions on Moscow and Germany has stalled its Russia-to-Germany Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline project. Russia has already annexed Ukraine's Crimea Peninsula in 2014, and pro-Russia rebels have since been fighting Ukrainian forces in the eastern areas of Donetsk and Luhansk - causing more than 14,000 people's deaths.
Updated 09:38 IST, February 24th 2022