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Putin orders import limits over sanctions, reports say US banned

WATCH: Vladimir Putin says the sanctions imposed on Russia have been unacceptable and that Russia would respond with retaliatory measures

MOSCOW – President Vladimir Putin has ordered government agencies to restrict imports of food and agricultural products from the countries that have imposed sanctions against Russia.

The text of Putin’s decree released by the Kremlin on Wednesday says that such imports will be “banned or limited” for up to one year. The decree doesn’t name any specific countries or products, but contains an order to government agencies to spell them out.

Russian official quoted as saying Russia will block US imports

A Russian official says all imports of agricultural products from the United States to Russia will be banned, the Russian state news agency RIA Novosti reported Wednesday.

RIA Novosti quoted Alexei Alexeenko of Russia’s sanitary oversight agency as saying “from the USA, all products that are produced there and brought to Russia will be prohibited.”

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READ MORE: Are sanctions against Russia working?

Alexeenko was quoted as saying the full list of banned imports would be released on Thursday, but that he thinks all fruits and vegetables from European Union countries will also be banned.

The move follows the latest round of sanctions against Russia imposed by the European Union last week, which for the first time targeted entire sectors of Russian economy.

The U.S. and the EU have accused Russia, which annexed Ukraine’s Crimean Peninsula in March, of fomenting tensions in eastern Ukraine by supplying arms and expertise to a pro-Moscow insurgency, and have imposed asset freezes and loan bans on a score of individuals and companies.

READ MORE: Canada announces new sanctions, travel bans against Russia

Russia depends heavily on imported foodstuffs – most of it from the West – particularly in the largest and most prosperous cities such as Moscow. Agricultural imports from the U.S. alone have amounted to about $1 billion annually in recent years and in 2013 the EU’s agricultural exports to Russia totalled 11.8 billion euros.

The order says the limits are being imposed “with the goal of guaranteeing the security of the Russian Federation” and calls for undertaking measures to guard against quick price hikes.

Putin’s order appears to show that Russia, although increasingly suffering the effects of Western sanctions, is disinclined to back down on Ukraine. Russia denies allegations that it is supporting the Ukrainian rebels or supplying them with equipment and has rejected claims that its artillery has been firing from across the border.

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As tensions over Ukraine rise, a respected newspaper this week cited unnamed sources as saying Russia is considering closing its airspace to European carriers flying to Asia. The report sent the stocks of some airlines sharply lower.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov on Wednesday said he wouldn’t comment on “rumours” of airspace being closed, but said “our Western partners should think about their companies and their citizens,” the Interfax news agency reported.

Russia last week banned the import of apples and some other fruits from Poland, saying this was because of sanitary concerns, but raising speculation that the move was in retaliation for Poland’s support of the Ukrainian authorities.

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