Russian politicians had from the time of Ukraine's independence questioned the
1954 transfer of Crimea, including prominent politicians such as mayor of Moscow
Yury Luzhkov and
Vladimir Zhirinovsky. In October 1991 Russian Vice President
Alexander Rutskoi, on a visit to Kyiv, claimed Russian control and ownership of the
Black Sea fleet, based in
Sevastopol, and, indirectly, Russian sovereignty over the whole
Crimean Peninsula. In April 1992 a similar resolution claiming Crimea was passed by the Russian Federation parliament. The Crimean Parliament's
choice of flag in September 1992 was seen as mimicking the
Russian tricolor. The status of Sevastopol, due to its strategic importance as the
main base of the Russian Black Sea Fleet, remained
disputed between Ukraine and Russia, with the rogue Russian Parliament staking a claim for Sevastopol in 1993. On 11 December 1992, the
President of Ukraine called the attempt of "the Russian deputies to charge the Russian parliament with a task to define the status of Sevastopol as an 'imperial disease'". In April 1993, during the
1993 Russian constitutional crisis, the Russian Parliament proposed to support a referendum on Crimean independence and include the republic as a separate entity in the
Commonwealth of Independent States, an offer that was later withdrawn. After
Boris Yeltsin won his struggle with the Russian Parliament the Russian stance towards Ukraine changed. Yeltsin refused to meet with the Crimean President, and Russian Prime Minister
Viktor Chernomyrdin stated that Russia had no claim on Crimea. In 1994, the legal status of Crimea as part of Ukraine was backed up by Russia, who pledged to uphold the territorial integrity of Ukraine in a
memorandum signed in 1994, also signed by the US and UK. == Name change in 1995 ==