Lithuania's President Says Nation 'Will Never Recognize' Russia's Crimea Annexation

Authored by newsweek.com and submitted by Twoweekswithpay

Lithuania's president on Monday took a firm stance against Russia's 2014 annexation of Crimea from Ukraine and the Kremlin's more recent military actions against its neighbors in Eastern Europe.

Gitanas Nauseda was in Warsaw addressing a remote session of Poland's and Lithuania's parliaments, marking the 230th anniversary of their joint constitution, Europe's first such written democratic document, the Associated Press reported.

"Lithuania will never recognize the illegal annexation of Crimea and will be taking steps toward ending the actual occupation of part of eastern Ukraine," Nauseda said. "Whatever happens, we cannot allow Ukraine to slide back into the past."

He also said that Lithuania backs the freedom drive in Belarus and will never allow it to be influenced by Moscow.

"There is no room in the Europe of the 21st century for new areas of influence that negate the sovereignty of independent countries," Nauseda said.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and the presidents of Latvia and Estonia were also among the guests at the ceremonies in Warsaw.

For more reporting from the Associated Press, see below.

During a later televised debate among the presidents, Poland's Andrzej Duda assured Zelenskyy it was also Warsaw's view that Russia's actions in Ukraine "must not be accepted."

Zelenskyy, who is to meet with U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken this week in Kyiv, said that the war against Moscow-backed separatists in eastern Ukraine means that "there is war in Europe."

"No one today will give up our sovereignty. We are fighting...because we want to be free," Zelenskyy said.

Following one-on-one talks with Duda, Zelenskyy thanked Poland for its strong support for Ukraine's territorial integrity and condemnation of Crimea's annexation.

Zelenskyy said he invited Duda to ceremonies in August marking 30 years of Ukraine's independence and to the accompanying meeting of state leaders that is to discuss the "de-occupation of Crimea."

During the presidents' debate Monday on the European Union and the pandemic, Zelenskyy said that Ukraine, which is aspiring to one day join the club, said it has not yet received any of the promised COVID-19 vaccines from the EU.

He said only 1 million people in his nation of more than 44 million have been immunized.

The five presidents signed a declaration stressing that solidarity among nations is the basis for peace, stability and development in today's world.

Poland's 1791 Constitution was intended to strengthen its political system and rule of law and protect it against aggression from neighboring powers, including Russia.

Historians say the effort came too late, and failed to avert annexations by the Russian, Prussian and Austrian empires that in 1795 wiped Poland from maps for more than a century.

Poland and neighboring Lithuania were one state at the time of the 18th-century constitution.

M4GordC on May 3rd, 2021 at 21:03 UTC »

I was given Lithuania to represent in early 2017 as a uni seminar exercise where everyone was an EU member state responding to whether to extend EU sanctions on Russia. I remember thinking and worrying my speech was a little too hardline towards Russia compared to the other more pragmatic approaches, but looking at this I feel a little more justified.

I always thought it was funny the person representing the UK didn't show up that day

bWoofles on May 3rd, 2021 at 18:30 UTC »

Lithuanian on a roll lately really not giving a shit what anyone thinks. Wonder if they will be able to get a serious EU wide action.

Twoweekswithpay on May 3rd, 2021 at 17:21 UTC »

"Lithuania will never recognize the illegal annexation of Crimea and will be taking steps toward ending the actual occupation of part of eastern Ukraine," Nauseda said. "Whatever happens, we cannot allow Ukraine to slide back into the past."

He also said that Lithuania backs the freedom drive in Belarus and will never allow it to be influenced by Moscow.

"There is no room in the Europe of the 21st century for new areas of influence that negate the sovereignty of independent countries," Nauseda said.