The two measures
not only underscore the acrimonious nature of the former Soviet countries'
relations but also highlight how difficult one of Europe 's
deadliest crises since the Balkans Wars of the 1990s may be to resolve.
Ukrainian Prime
Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk told a televised cabinet meeting that the flight ban
was justified because "Russia
might use Ukrainian airspace to stage provocations".
"This is an
issue of our country's national security -- a response to the Russian Federation
and its aggressive actions."
But President Petro
Poroshenko's government had at the time allowed Russian airlines to cross
Ukrainian airspace to other destinations.
Yatsenyuk said the
new decision came "in part as result of the escalation of the military and
geopolitical situation".
A shaky Ukrainian
truce is being increasingly put to the test as Russia
steps up its air campaign in support of President Bashar al-Assad in Syria .
The Ukrainian
military said another soldier was killed in a new bout of clashes across the
shattered war zone in the past 24 hours.
The army also said
it had imposed a unilateral ceasefire as of midnight in a bid to calm the
violence.
But Ukrainian
soldiers "will not watch calmly if the enemy decides to attack our
positions," the Ukrainian military's General Staff said in a statement.
"In case their
lives are in danger, our servicemen -- as previously -- have the right to open
fire."
Some analysts and
politicians in Kiev accuse Russian President
Vladimir Putin of using the world's focus on his campaign in Syria as cover
for launching a new phase in the Ukrainian war.
It has also
restricted imports of many Ukrainian goods and is threatening a complete
embargo on food imports from its neighbour to the west should Kiev joined a planned free trade alliance
with the European Union on January 1.
- Russian gas
deliveries halt -
Gazprom boss Alexei
Miller said Ukraine 's
state energy firm Naftogaz had used up all the gas it had paid for and "no
new upfront payment has been made".
The disruption is
the second of its kind this year. Ukraine had already gone a full
summer without making any purchases of Russian gas.
Putin waded further
into the dispute by pointing the finger of blame at the authorities in Ukraine for the ongoing power disruptions in Crimea .
Nearly two million
people in the strategic Black Sea peninsula have been without electricity --
almost all of it supplied by Ukraine
-- since the weekend after its four main pylons were blown up.
The disruption came
during attempts by Crimea 's ethnic minority
Tatars and Ukrainian nationalists to blockade the region and prompt its forced
return to the mainland.
No one has claimed
formal responsibility for the Crimean power outage.
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