The Asian Age

Russia threatens to oust another 50 UK diplomats

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Moscow, March 31: Russia said on Saturday that Britain had to reduce its diplomatic staff by more than 50 more people as a crisis in ties between Moscow and the West escalated over the nerve agent attack on a former spy.

The new measures came after 23 British diplomats left Russia earlier in March and are seen as Moscow’s punishment after Britain’s allies expelled Russian diplomats over the March 4 poisoning of former double agent Sergei Skripal and his daughter Yulia in an English city.

“Russia suggested parity. The British side has more than 50 more people,” foreign ministry spokespers­on Maria Zakharova told AFP.

On Friday, Moscow summoned British ambassador Laurie Bristow, giving London a month to cut the number of diplomatic staff in Russia to the same number Russia has in Britain.

He was summoned along with the heads of diplomatic missions from 23 other countries who were told that some of their diplomats had to leave, in the biggest wave of tit- fortat expulsions in recent memory. Mr Bristow had been handed a protest note over the “provocativ­e and unfounded actions of the British side which instigated the unwarrante­d expulsion of Russian diplomats from a variety of states,” the Russian foreign ministry said.

In London, a foreign office spokespers­on said on Saturday: “We are considerin­g the implicatio­n of the measures announced on Friday by the Russian foreign ministry.” The foreign office had said it regretted the most recent developmen­ts but insisted Russia was the culprit. “This doesn’t change the facts of the matter: the attempted assassinat­ion of two people on British soil, for which there is no alternativ­e conclusion other than that the Russian state was culpable,” it said.

More than 150 Russian diplomats have been ordered out of the US, EU members, Nato countries and other nations.

On Friday, Russia expelled diplomats from 23 countries — most of them EU member states — in retaliatio­n against the West. France, Germany, Canada and Poland each said that Russia was expelling four of their diplomats.

Other countries including Australia, Ukraine, the Netherland­s, Sweden, the Czech Republic, Finland, Lithuania and Norway were also told to pull their envoys. In the US, 60 Russian diplomats expelled by Washington prepared Saturday to leave the country. In total, 171 people — diplomats which Washington alleges are “spies” and their families — were set to leave the United States, Moscow’s envoy Anatoly Antonov told Russian reporters in Washington.

The Russian government provided two planes for the evacuation and one of them will make a brief stopover in New York to collect 14 families, he added.

Russia suggested parity. The British side has more than 50 more people — Maria Zakharova, Russian foreign ministry spokespers­on

Moscow, March 31: Russia said on Saturday that Britain had to reduce its diplomatic staff by more than 50 as a crisis in ties between Moscow and the West escalated over the nerve agent attack on a former spy.

The new measures came after 23 British diplomats left Russia earlier this month and are seen as Moscow’s punishment after UK’s allies expelled Russian diplomats over the March 4 poisoning of former double agent Sergei Skripal and his daughter Yulia in an English city. “Russia suggested parity. The British side has more than 50 more people,” foreign ministry spokeswoma­n Maria Zakharova said.

On Friday, Moscow summoned British ambassador Laurie Bristow, giving London a month to cut the number of diplomatic staff in Russia to the same number Russia has in UK.

He was summoned along with the heads of diplomatic missions from 23 other countries who were told that some of their diplomats had to leave.

Bristow had been handed a protest note over the “provocativ­e and unfounded actions of the British side which instigated the unwarrante­d expulsion of Russian diplomats from a variety of states,” the Russian foreign ministry said.

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