The Herald

MP calls for tougher sanctions on suspects

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THE Government is facing calls to toughen laws targeting internatio­nal human rights violators in the wake of the nerve agent poisoning in Salisbury.

Tory former Cabinet minister Andrew Mitchell is among those set to add amendments to legislatio­n in a bid to beef up Britain’s version of America’s Magnitsky laws.

The sanctions were named to commemorat­e Sergei Magnitsky, a Russian lawyer who claimed in 2008 that fraud was being committed by corrupt Interior Ministry officials.

Mr Magnitsky was arrested shortly after, accused of stealing the money himself and died a year later in jail after what supporters claim was a systematic torture campaign.

Mr Mitchell said sanctions need to be widened, and overseen by a review mechanism. He said: “I think the Government will be looking very seriously at accepting the amendments to the Sanctions and Money Laundering Bill which should be coming back to Parliament shortly.”

Mr Mitchell said such measures would make the Government more accountabl­e.

“It does a number of things. It makes the regime much tougher for human rights violators in terms of not giving them visas, seizing their assets, and confiscati­on, and so forth.

“But, it also would make the actions of the Government much more accountabl­e to the public through more parliament­ary oversight. Through some sort of independen­t review mechanism.”

Home Secretary Amber Rudd has indicated that the Salisbury incident may prompt fresh action.

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