The Welland Tribune

U.K. expels 23 Russian diplomats over poisoning

Soviets developed nerve agent used on ex-spy in Britain

- JILL LAWLESS AND DANICA KIRKA

LONDON — Britain will expel nearly two dozen Russian diplomats, sever high-level bilateral contacts with Moscow and take both open and covert action against Kremlin meddling after the poisoning of a former spy, the prime minister said Wednesday, plunging U.K.-Russian relations into their deepest freeze since the Cold War.

Prime Minister Theresa May told lawmakers that 23 Russian diplomats who have been identified as undeclared intelligen­ce officers have a week to leave the country.

May spoke after Moscow ignored a midnight deadline to explain how a nerve agent developed by the Soviet Union was used against Sergei Skripal, an ex-Russian agent convicted of spying for Britain, and his daughter Yulia. They remain in critical condition in a hospital in Salisbury, southweste­rn England, after being found unconsciou­s on March 4.

May said Russia had provided no explanatio­n, and “there is no alternativ­e conclusion other than that the Russian state was culpable for the attempted murder of Mr. Skripal and his daughter.”

She announced a range of economic and diplomatic measures, including the suspension of high-level contacts with Russia. An invitation for Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov to visit Britain has been cancelled, and May said British ministers and royals won’t attend the soccer World Cup in Russia this summer.

May also said Britain would clamp down on murky Russian money and strengthen its powers to impose sanctions on abusers of human rights — though she gave few details.

“We will freeze Russian state assets wherever we have the evidence that they may be used to threaten the life or property of U.K. nationals or residents,” May said, promising to use all possible legal powers against criminals and corrupt elites.

“There is no place for these people — or their money — in our country,” she said.

May vowed to use law-enforcemen­t and intelligen­ce powers to disrupt Russian spying and “threats of hostile state activity.” She said some of the measures “cannot be shared publicly for reasons of national security.”

The Russian Embassy in London said the expulsion of diplomats was “totally unacceptab­le, unjustifie­d and short-sighted.”

“All the responsibi­lity for the deteriorat­ion of the Russia-U.K. relationsh­ip lies with the current political leadership of Britain,” it said in a statement.

Russian Ambassador Alexander Yakovenko said Britain’s actions were “a provocatio­n.”

Some Russia experts said the measures announced by May were unlikely to make Russian President Vladimir Putin’s government change its behaviour. She didn’t expel Russia’s ambassador or announce sanctions against any individual­s.

Critics of the British government have long claimed that the U.K. is reluctant to act against Russia because London’s property market and financial sector are magnets for billions in Russian money.

“There does not seem to be any real appetite so far to investigat­e the ill-gotten gains of the Russian elite that have been laundered through London,” said John Lough of the Eurasia program at the Chatham House think-tank. “It is not clear to me that London’s response will hit the Kremlin where it hurts.”

Moscow refused to comply with Britain’s demands that it explain how Novichok — a form of nerve agent developed by the Soviet Union during the Cold War — came to be used in Britain. Russia said the U.K. must first provide samples of the poison collected by investigat­ors.

Britain has sought support from allies in the European Union and NATO, including the United States. May’s office said President Donald Trump told the prime minister the United States was “with the U.K. all the way.”

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