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Russia on Thursday presented a new bank note that shows images of Crimea, the Ukrainian peninsula annexed by Moscow in 2014. The note worth 200 rubles ($3.50) shows a naval memorial in the city of Sevastopol, where Russia's Black Sea fleet is based, and UNESCO-protected Greek and Roman ruins at nearby Chersonesus. The design also includes a map of the peninsula.
The images on the bank note were chosen after a national competition last year to pick symbols of Russia. "The Russian people chose these symbols," the head of Russia's central bank, Elvira Nabiullina, told journalists in Moscow. "This reflects the desire of the people of Russia to see these symbols on notes." She insisted that the new images "will not harm the position of the ruble in any way."
By putting images of Crimea in the nation's wallets, Russia is capitalising on the wave of patriotism prompted by the peninsula's annexation in March 2014. It also comes as a defiant response to Kiev and to the sanctions imposed by European Union and the United States that have hit the ruble hard. The green-tinged note has now become legal tender, along with a new 2,000-ruble bill that shows Russia's new cosmodrome in Vostochny in the far east.

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