
Ukraine's ‘rout' will continue
The EU member states had approved the sweeping economic restrictions earlier in the day, mostly targeting Russia's energy and financial sectors, in another attempt to pressure the country over the Ukraine conflict. Moscow has repeatedly condemned the sanctions as 'illegal.'
The measures will not derail Moscow with regards to the conflict any more than the previous 17 packages did, according to Medvedev, who now serves as deputy chairman of Russia's Security Council.
'Our economy will, of course, survive, and the rout of the Banderite regime will continue. Strikes against objects in the so-called Ukraine, including Kiev, will be carried out with increasing force,' he wrote on Telegram.
Moscow should politically steer away from the EU and distance itself from the bloc, he added.
Brussels' new sanctions bar all transactions with 22 additional banks, as well as with the Russian Direct Investment Fund. The package also imposes a ban on utilizing the Nord Stream gas pipelines, which were mostly disabled by sabotage in 2022 and have remained unused since.
The ban also bars the provision of goods and services for the pipeline, 'thus preventing the completion, maintenance, operation and any future use' of the gas infrastructure, the European Council said in a statement on Friday.
Additionally, the new restrictions add a further 105 ships to a blacklist of what Brussels calls the 'shadow fleet' engaged in transporting Russian crude and bypassing the bloc's 'price cap' on Moscow's oil exports. The sanctions lower the price ceiling and add a mechanism for adjusting to future changes in market conditions.
Russia has 'built up a certain immunity' to sanctions and 'adapted to life' under them, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told journalists on Friday, commenting on the EU decision.
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