Ukraine Bans U.S. Film Star Seagal As 'National Security Threat'
Ukraine has banned U.S. action film star Steven Seagal from entering the country, labeling him a national security threat.
The Ukraine National News (UNN) agency on May 5 quoted the Security Service of Ukraine (SBU) as saying Seagal would be banned for five years.
Seagal, who received Russian citizenship in November, has publicly supported Moscow's illegal annexation of Ukraine’s Crimean Peninsula and participated in a concert there in August 2014.
Moscow seized control of Crimea in March 2014 and has supported separatists in eastern Ukraine in fighting that has killed more than 9,750 people.
The United States and the European Union have imposed sanctions on Russia in retaliation for its actions in Ukraine.
Seagal, 65, grew up in California but claims Russian and Mongolian ancestry.
Reports have said he holds a black belt in aikido and is a friend of Russian President Vladimir Putin, who also is a fan of the martial arts.
Other celebrities have been banned from Ukraine after taking Russian citizenship and expressing support for Russia’s annexation of Crimea, including French film star Gerard Depardieu.
In March, Ukraine barred Russia's contestant in the Eurovision Song Contest from entering the country because it said she had performed in Crimea in 2015.
That ban will prevent Yulia Samoilova, 22, from participating in the song contest scheduled for May 13 in Kyiv. Russia is boycotting the event.
Based on reporting by dpa, UNN, Interfax, Apostrophe.ua, and The Guardian
That concludes our live-blogging of the Ukraine crisis for Friday, May 5, 2017. Check back here tomorrow for more of our continuing coverage. Thanks for reading and take care.
In case you missed it ...
'A Dead Soldier Is No Enemy' -- Repatriating The Fallen In Ukraine
A mother finds her son's body, three years after he was killed in Ukraine -- thanks to volunteers who repatriate bodies following the credo: "A dead soldier is not an enemy." (RFE/RL's Ukrainian Service)
Here is today's map of the security situation in eastern Ukraine, according to the National Security and Defense Council:
"Peace plan" lawmaker stripped of citizenship by presidential decree:
By Christopher Miller
KYIV -- Andriy Artemenko, a Ukrainian lawmaker whose plan to resolve the three-year-old conflict in Ukraine reportedly wound up on the desk of then-U.S. national security adviser Michael Flynn, has been stripped of his citizenship by presidential decree, the State Migration Service says.
The migration service said in a statement on May 5 that President Petro Poroshenko had terminated Artemenko's Ukrainian citizenship over the lawmaker's voluntary acceptance of foreign citizenship.
Artemenko had previously acknowledged that he holds Canadian citizenship.
Artemenko's "peace plan," which calls for holding a national referendum on leasing Crimea to Russia for a period of 30 to 50 years, made headlines in February when he was quoted in a New York Times report as saying he had given the document to associates of President Donald Trump who then passed it to someone who put it on Flynn's desk.
The news caused a scandal in Kyiv, and Artemenko was ejected from the Radical Party as a result. Ukrainian investigators later opened a treason case over his actions.
After a Moscow-friendly Ukrainian president fled in the face of protests in February 2014, Russia seized Ukraine's Crimean Peninsula and fomented separatism in eastern Ukraine, where a war between Russia-backed separatists and government forces has killed more than 9,900 people since April 2014.
Russia says it will never return Crimea to Ukraine, making the idea of leasing it to Moscow improbable even if it could gain support in Ukraine, where many people would oppose voluntarily granting Russia any form of control over the peninsula.
Artemenko's plan never made it to Flynn, who was forced out in February after it was revealed that he misled Vice President Mike Pence about his contacts with Russia's ambassador to the United States during the election campaign. He is currently under formal investigation by the Pentagon over apparently undisclosed Russian payments.
Artemenko did not immediately respond to RFE/RL's request for comment. But when RFE/RL communicated with him via Facebook Messenger on May 2, the lawmaker did not respond directly to questions about what were then rumors of his loss of citizenship.
"Fake news destroyed careers and unfortunately kills people!!!! Still waiting official confirmation or denial from president administration on my deputy request. So will see what next..." Artemenko wrote, adding that he was in Washington, D.C.
He did not explain what the "deputy request" was.
"I have a couple of very important meetings with U.S. and Canada officials and Ukrainean [sic] diaspora," he claimed. Asked if he was still pushing his "peace plan" for Ukraine and trying to meet with Trump administration officials, he wrote, "Exactly."
Artemenko did not say whether he would return to Ukraine.