25 July 2014

German business '100 percent behind sanctions' if Putin doesn't help

Reuters: 25. July 2014

Pro-Russian separatist fighters from the so-called Battalion Vostok (East) travel on armoured vehicles in the eastern Ukrainian city of Donetsk, July 10, 2014.. REUTERS/Maxim Zmeyev
Pro-Russian separatist fighters from the so-called Battalion Vostok (East) travel on armoured vehicles in the eastern Ukrainian city of Donetsk, July 10, 2014..

A German business leader who has previously warned against economic sanctions on Russia has come out in support of tougher action if President Vladimir Putin fails to cooperate on stabilizing the situation in Ukraine.
"Business will implement what the government and EU decide. If they say Russia is not cooperating enough and we are applying tougher sanctions, we'll back that 100 percent," Eckhard Cordes of the Committee on Eastern European Economic Relations told the daily Handelsblatt in an interview published on Friday.

Other business lobby groups have also begun taking a tougher tone against Moscow, especially since the downing of a Malaysian plane last week over eastern Ukraine, killing 298 people. That incident has been widely blamed on pro-Russian separatists.
Earlier on in the Ukraine crisis, business groups like the one Cordes presides warned against tough sanctions on Russia, saying it could cost thousands of jobs in Germany's export-oriented industry and push up energy prices in Europe.

German exports to Russia dropped by 14 percent in the first four months of the year, according to official data, and Cordes has warned that the decline in trade is putting some 25,000 jobs at risk in Germany.
But as the European Union, the United States and allies add people and companies to their trade blacklists and inch towards wide sectoral sanctions, German business has begun speaking of the "primacy of politics" - while hoping for a ceasefire.
"If the price has to be paid, we will pay it," said Cordes.

He said proposed financial sanctions blocking Russian access to capital markets would be "the most painful and would have a very rapid effect", while sanctions affecting arms and energy companies would take longer to show an impact.

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