Russia's Putin courts Ukraine while attending religious festival

(Photo: REUTERS / Michael Klimentyev / RIA Novosti / Kremlin)Russian President Vladimir Putin (2nd R) and Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovich (R) attend a service at the Saint Vladimir Cathedral near the Crimean port of Sevastopol July 28, 2013.

KIEV (Reuters) - Russian President Vladimir Putin urged Ukraine to weigh carefully the benefits of joining Russia's regional trade bloc against its plans for closer ties with the European Union on a visit to Ukraine to attend a religious festival.

Putin used references to common history to remind Ukraine of the potential benefits of a closer alliance with Russia, just four months before a summit in the Lithuanian capital Vilnius where Kiev hopes to sign landmark deals with the European Union.

"There is tough competition going on for the global markets. And I am sure most of you realise that only by joining forces we can be competitive and win in this rather tough struggle," Putin told a conference in Kiev on July 27.

Putin was visiting Ukraine for the 1,025th anniversary of a mass baptism which marked the consolidation of Kievan Rus, the medieval state from which the Russian Empire later grew.

He cited figures showing that while Russia's trade with Ukraine fell 18 percent in the first quarter if this year, trade turnover within the Moscow-led post-Soviet Customs Union bloc grew by 2-3 percent.

Russia, averse to Ukraine's move towards the EU, has long urged Ukraine to join the Customs Union bloc. It has even hinted that Kiev could get a discount on Russian gas supplies on which Ukraine depends heavily but which it says are being sold for an "exorbitant" price today.

But Kiev's planned agreements on free trade and political association with the European Union, which it hopes to sign in November, will rule out the possibility of a trade deal with the Russia-led bloc.

And although Putin said on Saturday that Moscow "will respect any choice made by our Ukrainian partners, friends and brothers", Kiev cannot ignore the risk of retribution from Russia, the main market for Ukrainian exports, in the form of trade restrictions.

BALANCING ACT

While Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovich showed no signs of having second thoughts regarding the EU deals, he tried to sweeten the pill.

Yanukovich stressed Russia's role as a "strategic partner" when he and Putin travelled to the southern port city of Sevastopol where Russia leases a base from Ukraine for its Black Sea navy. "We appreciate and value our friendship with Russia," he said.

In a more material move, he pledged that Ukraine, which has so far opposed Russia's efforts to upgrade vessels in the ageing Black Sea navy, would give it the green light.

"President (Yanukovich) said that the Ukrainian government would do everything it can to make sure that navy upgrade programmes are carried out," his office said in a statement.

Ukrainian law enforcers also did their best to shield Putin from the famous local - and now internationally active - topless protesters from the Femen women's rights group.

Kiev police said on Saturday they had detained three Femen activists and a photographer from Russia who was with them, as they posed for pictures in public, bare to the waist.

The Femen group, in turn, says its activists were beaten up and kidnapped pre-emptively when they were on their way to protest against the baptism celebrations and visits by Putin and Russian Orthodox Church Patriarch Kirill.

(Reporting by Alexei Anishchuk; Writing by Olzhas Auyezov; Editing by Richard Balmforth and Giles Elgood)

Copyright © 2013 Ecumenical News