The Daily Telegraph

Boris attacks Putin for repression of Russia

- By Boris Johnson

Boris Johnson today accuses Vladimir Putin of repressing the Russian people and hunting down his enemies to “guarantee his perpetual rule”. The Foreign Secretary writes in The Daily Telegraph that the election of the Russian president for another six years “resembled a coronation”, highlighti­ng CCTV footage showing officials “nonchalant­ly stuffing ballot boxes”. Citing the poisoning of Sergei Skripal, the spy, and his daughter, he says Russia is sending out a clear threat.

To understand why three people lie stricken in Salisbury, look at Vladimir Putin’s actions inside Russia. Yesterday he was proclaimed the winner of an election that resembled a coronation, complete with a triumphant ceremony outside the walls of the Kremlin.

Mr Putin’s leading opponent had obviously been banned from standing and an abundance of CCTV footage appeared to show election officials nonchalant­ly stuffing ballot boxes.

“A choice without a real competitio­n, as we have seen in this election, unfortunat­ely is not a real choice,” was the verdict of the observer mission from the Organisati­on for Security and Cooperatio­n in Europe.

Mr Putin is taking his country in a dangerous direction. Throughout his rule he has eroded the liberties of the Russian people and hunted down supposed foes. When a leader starts behaving in this way then no one should be surprised if many of his compatriot­s feel drawn to the example of countries that observe a different scale of values.

They will notice that plenty of nations hold elections where no one knows the result in advance.

They will understand how an independen­t media exposes the failings or evasions of democratic government­s. And they will wonder why Russia cannot have the same?

Mr Putin cannot give the straight answer, which is that he must deny Russia those freedoms in order to guarantee his perpetual rule.

Instead, he has to send an emphatic message that asking awkward questions carries a terrible price.

Which brings us back to Salisbury. The use of a Russian military grade “Novichok” nerve agent against Sergei Skripal and his daughter, Yulia, was very deliberate. As Ken Clarke pointed out in Parliament last week, the obvious Russian-ness of the weapon was designed to send a signal to anyone pondering dissent amid the intensifyi­ng repression of Mr Putin’s Russia. The message is clear: we will hunt you down, we will find you and we will kill you – and though we will scornfully deny our guilt, the world will know that Russia did it.

There was a hint of this in Mr Putin’s first public response to Salisbury. He denied Russia’s culpabilit­y – of course – while carefully injecting a note of menace. “If it was military grade agent,” he said, “they would have died on the spot, obviously.” Obviously. He had already told state television that traitors would “kick the bucket” and “choke” on their “pieces of silver”.

Yet the Kremlin, accustomed to a tame official media, is clearly struggling to get its story straight.

Since the Skripals and Detective Sergeant Nick Bailey were struck down on March 4, Russian officials and the state media have claimed variously that “Novichok” never existed, or the stockpiles were destroyed, or they weren’t destroyed but mysterious­ly escaped to other countries.

Alexander Shulgin, the Russian Ambassador to The Hague, told Sky News: “I’ve never heard about this programme, about this Novichok agent. Never.” But his memory suddenly improved when he appeared on Russia Today and said that Novichok had been developed by the Soviet Union. “There never was such a programme under such a code name in the Russian Federation,” he said. “However, in Soviet times research began to produce a new generation of poisonous substances.”

Meanwhile, other Russian officials have sought to conjure doubt and suspicion out of thin air. Alexander Yakovenko, the Russian Ambassador in London, questioned the absence of photograph­s of the Skripals in their hospital beds. His counterpar­t in

Russian state is resorting to its usual strategy of trying to conceal the needle of truth in a haystack of lies

Brussels, Vladimir Chizhov, accused Britain of breaking “consular convention­s” because Russian officials had not been able to visit the Skripals.

The response to the two envoys is so obvious that I can scarcely believe they require instructio­n. Sergei and Yulia Skripal have been in a coma since March 4 – as you would expect from victims of a nerve agent attack.

They cannot give their consent to be photograph­ed or receive visitors. Under the NHS Code of Practice, hospitals must have their patients’ permission before allowing this to happen. And I will make the point as delicately as possible: it is not obvious that the Skripals, of all patients, would welcome a visit from Russian officials.

The Russian state is resorting to its usual strategy of trying to conceal the needle of truth in a haystack of lies. But when I met my European counterpar­ts in Brussels yesterday, what struck me most is that no one is fooled. Just about every country represente­d around the table had been affected by malign or disruptive Russian behaviour. Most had endured the kind of mendacious propaganda onslaught that the UK is experienci­ng today. This is how Mr Putin behaves at home; we should not expect anything different abroad.

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