The pro-Moscow leader of Ukraine's flashpoint Crimea peninsula called Friday on Russian-speaking eastern regions of Ukraine to hold their own referendums on switching over to Kremlin rule.
"If a sufficient number of people support it in those regions, then they should also have referendums," self-declared prime minister Sergiy Aksyonov told reporters ahead of Sunday's referendum in Crimea, which has been backed by Moscow but denounced as illegal by Kiev and much of the international community.
Earlier, Germany said Friday that the result of the referendum, which the West fears will lead to its annexation by Russia, will be "irrelevant".
A foreign ministry spokesman also said the plebiscite "can be interpreted as a speeding up of the escalation of the situation".
"The result is irrelevant," he told reporters, two days before the vote in the Russian-speaking region.
He pointed to the short timescale in the organisation of the vote and the limitations posed by the two questions being asked inhabitants.
"There is no option in this so-called referendum for people to say they are happy with the status quo," spokesman Martin Schaefer said.
Voters will be presented with two choices -- either joining Russia or "the significant strengthening of their autonomy within Ukraine".
Both options, he said, "present massive changes" to the current situation in the peninsula.
He also said the organisation of the referendum in just 10 days raised "significant doubts" about whether it could be effectively carried out.
U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry has warned Russia that Washington and Europe could announce a "very serious" response as early as Monday if Moscow does not pull back the troops who seized control of Crimea days after the pro-Kremlin regime fell in Kiev last month.
On Thursday Chancellor Angela Merkel warned Russia of "massive" long-term damage to its interests if it continued to violate international law with its seizure of the Crimean peninsula.
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