This article is from the source 'bbc' and was first published or seen on . It will not be checked again for changes.
You can find the current article at its original source at http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/-/1/hi/world/europe/7824510.stm
The article has changed 7 times. There is an RSS feed of changes available.
Version 3 | Version 4 |
---|---|
Russia 'to resume gas supplies' | Russia 'to resume gas supplies' |
(about 1 hour later) | |
Russia will resume pumping gas to third countries via Ukraine from Tuesday morning, following the completion of a monitoring deal, the EU says. | Russia will resume pumping gas to third countries via Ukraine from Tuesday morning, following the completion of a monitoring deal, the EU says. |
The Czech presidency of the EU made the announcement following the signing of a deal by Russia, Ukraine and the EU. | The Czech presidency of the EU made the announcement following the signing of a deal by Russia, Ukraine and the EU. |
Hundreds of thousands of people in Europe have been left without gas since Russia turned off the taps over a contractual dispute with Ukraine. | Hundreds of thousands of people in Europe have been left without gas since Russia turned off the taps over a contractual dispute with Ukraine. |
Despite the deal, it may be some time before supplies return to normal. | Despite the deal, it may be some time before supplies return to normal. |
Analysts say that in theory, supplies could return to normal within 24 hours but a more likely time frame is 36 to 48 hours. | |
Under the gas transit deal, international pipeline monitors will verify the flow of Russian gas through Ukraine. | |
name="top"> class="bodl" href="#map">See map of affected area | |
Deadline for conditions | |
The BBC's Gabriel Gatehouse says that the agreement may be greeted with scepticism in some of the hardest-hit countries, after the same deal fell through last week. | |
Moscow says it expects all its conditions to be met by Tuesday morning. | |
Central to those conditions is the presence of EU and Russian monitors at pumping stations on Ukraine's eastern and western borders. | |
While a number of EU teams are already in position, others are not, and Russian monitors have still to deploy to stations in western Ukraine, our correspondent says. | |
Moscow turned off the taps last week after it accused Kiev of stealing gas meant for other European customers. | |
Alexander Medvedev, deputy chief executive of Russian gas giant Gazprom, told a news conference in Brussels on Monday: "If there are no obstacles... gas supplies will be restarted at 8 o'clock [0700 GMT]. | |
"[We] will all hope it will happen tomorrow." | "[We] will all hope it will happen tomorrow." |
Earlier, Ukraine had dropped provisos it wanted to add to the agreement. | Earlier, Ukraine had dropped provisos it wanted to add to the agreement. |
Russian President Dmitry Medvedev had emphasised that Russian gas to Europe via Ukraine would flow only when monitors were in place and a transit deal had been signed by all parties. | Russian President Dmitry Medvedev had emphasised that Russian gas to Europe via Ukraine would flow only when monitors were in place and a transit deal had been signed by all parties. |
Russia cut gas supplies to Ukraine on New Year's Day, saying it would pump only enough for customers further down the pipeline. | |
But then Moscow accused Ukraine of siphoning off gas intended for third countries and it restricted supplies even further. | |
Ukraine denied the claim, but the flow of Russian gas ceased completely on 7 January, leaving many European countries with major shortages. | |
The EU called the supply cut "completely unacceptable", and entered into shuttle diplomacy between Kiev and Moscow. | |
A deal was struck at the end of last week, but fell through when Moscow alleged that Ukraine was trying to deny its debt to Russia for gas supplies. | |
Back to top | Back to top |