EU opens antitrust case against Russia's Gazprom gas giant
BRUSSELS (AP) -- The European Union is opening an antitrust case against Russia's state-controlled Gazprom energy giant amid worsening relations between Brussels and Moscow.
EU Competition Commissioner Margrethe Vestager said Wednesday that Gazprom's behavior in central and eastern European member states, where it sometimes almost fully controls the gas market, amounts to an abuse of its dominant position.
Vestager said she is concerned that Gazprom imposes contractual obligations "preventing gas from flowing from certain Central Eastern European countries to others, hindering cross-border competition" and allowing the multinational to charge unfair prices.
The move comes at a time when the EU has already imposed economic and political sanctions on Russia for its involvement in the violence in eastern Ukraine.
Gazprom has 12 weeks to react to Wednesday's EU allegations.
Lavrov Says Ukraine's Neutrality Important, Lambasts U.S.
Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov says Ukraine's unity and neutrality are in Russia's interests.
In an interview on April 22 with Moscow-based radio stations Ekho Moskvy, Govorit Moskva and Sputnik, Lavrov said "it's in our interest not to divide Ukraine; it's in our interests to keep it neutral, primarily in a military-political sense."
Lavrov added that Russia wants "Ukraine to be peaceful and quiet" and not "dismembered" by some European countries "that once gave some of their territories to the current Ukrainian state after World War II."
Lavrov also said the United States is using the Ukrainian crisis to reach its "strategic goal" to "hinder the development of Russia's cooperation with the EU, especially with Germany."
He expressed doubts about the effectiveness of the U.S. program to assist Ukraine's Army with instructors, claiming that such attempts were unsucessful in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Based on reporting by Ekho Moskvy and Interfax
France 'will reimburse Russia' if warships not delivered:
French President Francois Hollande says France will refund payments made by Russia for two Mistral amphibious-assault ships if the warships are not delivered because of Moscow's involvement in the Ukraine conflict.
Hollande said in Paris after talks with Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko on April 22 that he will discuss the $1.3 billion Mistral deal with Russian President Vladimir Putin when the two meet in Armenia on April 24.
France postponed the delivery of the first warship to Moscow in autumn 2014 in response to Russia's illegal annexation of Ukraine's Crimean Peninsula and the Kremlin's support for pro-Russian separatists in eastern Ukraine.
Putin said last week that Moscow expects reimbursement if France ultimately does not deliver the warships -- each of which can carry 16 helicopters, four landing crafts, 13 tanks, and more than 400 soldiers.
Hollande and Putin will be in Yerevan to mark the 100th anniversary of the mass killings of Armenians by Ottoman forces.
Both France and Russia recognize the killings as genocide. (Reuters, AP, Interfax)