Dec 20, 2022 15:39 UTC
  • Putin says situation 'extremely complicated' in Russia's new regions amid new threats

Russian President Vladimir Putin says the situation in four former regions of Ukraine that recently voted to join the Russian union is "extremely complicated", urging the country’s security agencies to remain vigilant in the wake of new threats and challenges.

According to Press TV, in a video address published by the Kremlin, Putin said, “Today’s rapidly changing global situation and the emergence of new threats and challenges impose high demands on the entire system of Russia’s security agencies.” He urged the agencies to use their experience and potential “to the fullest".

The Russian president praised the country's premier security agencies, including the Federal Security Service (FSB), Foreign Intelligence Service (SVR), Federal Protective Service (FSO), and the Main Directorate of Special Programs (GUSP), for protecting the country's constitutional order and territorial integrity, state media reported.

Putin added that the situation in former Ukrainian regions that recently incorporated into Russia was "extremely complicated".

“The situation in the Donetsk and Lugansk People’s Republics, and the Kherson and Zaporizhzhia regions is extremely complicated. But the people who live there, Russian citizens, are counting on you and your protection," the Russian president noted.

"And your duty is to do everything in your power to ensure their safety and respect for their rights and freedoms."

In September this year, Putin signed a decree for the formal accession of the four regions to the Russian Federation, a move that Ukraine and its Western allies decried as illegal.

Back then, Putin announced that people in these regions are now considered Russian citizens as they have made their choice in referendums.

In his speech on Tuesday, which marks the professional holiday of December 20 for Russia's security agencies, Putin pointed to "the emergence of new threats and challenges", and ordered the FSB to continue their counter-terrorism efforts and to combat spies.

"The counterintelligence agencies, including the military ones, need to show utmost readiness and concentration. It is necessary to put a firm stop to the activities of foreign special services, and to promptly identify traitors, spies and diversionists," the Russian president stressed. 

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