Daily Mirror (Northern Ireland)

SEE NO EVIL ..HEAR NO EVIL

Meddling Putin a clear ‘threat’ to UK But PM refuses Brexit vote probe

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BORIS Johnson was under pressure last night to order a probe into claims Vladimir Putin’s Russia tried to sway the Brexit referendum.

The Prime Minister and his Government were accused of an “astonishin­g lack of curiosity” over claims of Moscow meddling.

But Mr Johnson, who has surrounded himself with Vote Leave architects including Dominic Cummings and Michael Gove, has continued to resist calls for an investigat­ion.

Acting Lib Dem leader Ed

Davey said the PM was giving the Russian leader president a “green light” to interfere in UK politics.

Yesterday’s publicatio­n of a long-delayed Intelligen­ce and Security Committee report warned “Russia considers the UK one of its top Western intelligen­ce targets”.

It highlighte­d espionage and cyber-attacks, election meddling and money laundering.

The report also branded the Kremlin’s influence in the UK the “new normal” after successive government­s welcomed oligarchs – giving Putin’s allies

links “at the highest levels” of British public life.

The committee said: “It has been clear for some time Russia has moved from potential partner to establishe­d threat, unwilling to adhere to internatio­nal law.

“The murder of Alexander

Litvinenko and the annexation of Crimea were stark indicators.

“It was the opinion of the committee that until recently the Government badly underestim­ated the response required to the Russia threat and is still playing catch-up.”

ISC member Stewart Hosie said

the committee “found it astonishin­g” ministers did not try to shield the EU vote from interferen­ce or probe claims of meddling.

The SNP MP said: “No one in government knew if Russia interfered because they did not want to know. The UK Government actively avoided looking for evidence. We were told they haven’t seen any, but that is meaningles­s if they haven’t looked.”

They showed a “lack of curiosity”, Mr Hosie added – especially given claims Russia tried to influence the 2016 US presidenti­al race and Scotland’s vote on independen­ce in 2014.

Claims Russians were involved in the 2016 EU referendum have dogged the result. Yesterday’s heavily redacted, 55-page report pointed to “widespread” fears about Russian TV channels and web accounts.

“Open source studies have pointed to the prepondera­nce of pro-brexit or

anti-eu stories on RT and Sputnik, and the use of bots and trolls,” it said.

Ahead of an urgent question in Parliament today, Labour’s Shadow Home Secretary Nick Thomassymo­nds said the Government had failed “on every level”.

Mr Thomas-symonds said: “The report exposes deep systemic failings in the approach to security.

“[It] outlines a litany of hostile state activity, from cyber-warfare, interferin­g in democratic processes, acts of violence on UK soil and illicit finance.

“Little wonder the Government has been so keen to delay publicatio­n.”

Mr Johnson marks his first anniversar­y in Downing Street on Friday.

Asked yesterday if the PM believed the referendum result was “fair”, his spokesman said: “Yes. Absolutely.” The Government’s 20-page response to the report said: “We have seen no evidence of successful interferen­ce in the EU referendum.”

Meanwhile, Russian IT businessma­n Aleksej Gubarev, told the High Court he was “stunned” to be linked to a US Democratic Party “hacking incident”.

He is suing ex-british spy Chris Steele over a dossier alleging links between Donald Trump and Russia.

Mr Gubarev said: “I have never been involved with the Russian federal security services or any cyber-attacks on the US Democratic Party.”

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