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Russia will build a rail and road bridge from Crimea to southern Russia, President Vladimir
Putin said on Wednesday, confirming the long-planned project would go ahead after Russia seized
the peninsula. "Here we need a bridge to take both cars and
trains," Putin said at a meeting with his ministers, cited on the Kremlin website.
The bridge would allow Russia to deliver people and cargoes directly to Crimea without going
through mainland Ukraine. Currently there is only a basic car and pedestrian ferry service
across the 4.5 kilometre (2.8 mile) wide Kerch strait.
Transport minister Maxim Sokolov earlier this week estimated the project would cost a minimum
50 billion rubles ($1.4 billion) and take at least three-and-a-half years.
Ukrainian officials previously put the cost at $1-3 billion.
Sokolov told Putin that Russia was also studying the option of building a rail tunnel under
the seabed, where he said there were "complex geological and hydrological conditions."
"We will carry out all these parallel processes as quickly as possible in order to start the
construction of the bridge as soon as possible," the transport minister said.
A spokesman for state monopoly Russian Railways, cited by RIA Novosti news agency, said the
company was "ready to take part in developing the project".
Early this month, Russian Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev put federal road agency Rosavtodor
in charge of the bridge project. The project had been agreed in December between
Russia and the former Ukrainian government of now ousted president Viktor Yanukovych.
A bridge between the Crimean town of Kerch and the long Chushka spit on the Taman peninsula
in Russia's Krasnodar region has been envisioned for decades since the Soviet era.
The German army began to construct a link in 1943, when the Crimea was under Nazi occupation.
Soviet authorities later finished the bridge, but it was destroyed by shifting ice even
before the end of World War II. In the 1990s, a new bridge was lobbied for
by then-mayor of Moscow Yury Luzhkov, with reports estimating the cost at about $1 billion
at the time.