Russian officials voiced support for Crimea’s vote for secession on Friday, the New York Times reported, with the heads of Russia’s Parliament announcing that the Ukrainian peninsula would be welcomed back into the Russian Federation.
The announcement came hours after President Barack Obama condemned the vote as unlawful and spoke by phone with Russian President Vladimir Putin to emphasize the sovereignty of Ukraine.
“The proposed referendum would violate the Ukraine’s constitution and international law,” Obama said in a brief statement Thursday at the White House. “In 2014, we are well beyond the days when borders can be redrawn over the heads of democratic leaders.”
On Thursday, Crimea’s Parliament voted unanimously—with eight abstentions—to ask Russia if it was open to absorbing the predominantly ethnic-Russian peninsula of Ukraine. If so, Crimea promised to pose a ballot referendum on March 16 to allow the people to ratify their vote. Some have questioned whether a region that has been occupied by an estimated 16,000 Russian troops is capable of holding a fair and free referendum on the matter.
Putin has maintained that Russia has no intention of annexing Crimea, but on Tuesday, he said during a press conference that the region should be able to decide its own fate. Putin also denied that there were Russian forces in the region.
“I do not see an annexation of Crimea as an opportunity,” he said. ”I emphasize that only the citizens of a particular territory have a right to decide for themselves.”
It’s a peculiar narrative for Russia, which has denied longstanding and similar requests from regions like Dagestan and Chechnya.
Crimea, like Russia, denies the legitimacy of the Ukranian Parliament after the ouster of President Viktor Yanukovych.
“This is our response to the disorder and lawlessness in Kiev,” said Sergei Shuvainikov, a member of the local Crimean legislature, on Thursday. “We will decide our future ourselves.”
Sergi Naryshkin, the speaker of Russia’s State Duma, the lower house of the Parliament, announced thestate’s strong support for the move on Friday.
“We’ll support free and democratic choice of the Crimean population,” he said, according to the news agency Interfax.
The speaker of the upper house of Russia’s Parliament also announced support and affirmed the country’sbelief in the vote’s legitimacy.
“If the people of Crimea demonstrate their will and will make such a decision – about becoming a part ofRussia’s territory – we as the upper chamber of parliament will support their decision,” Speaker ValentinaMatvienko told a delegation of Crimean leaders, according to the Russian news agency ITAR-TASS.
“Without a doubt, the Crimean parliament, as a legitimate authority, has that right … The sovereign right of the people to determine their future,” she added.
Both Moscow and Washington released contrasting statements on the latest call between Obama and Putin.









