Western Mail

Russian businesses banned from using UK accountant­s as Truss reveals latest sanctions

- DAVID LYNCH newsdesk@walesonlin­e.co.uk

RUSSIAN businesses will be banned from using UK-based accountanc­y firms, as new sanctions against major media organisati­ons from the country have been announced.

Measures announced by Foreign Secretary Liz Truss will see Russian businesses cut off from the UK’s accountanc­y, management consultanc­y and PR sectors, with an aim to further damage the Russian economy in light of the invasion of Ukraine.

According to the UK Government, Russia is “heavily reliant” on service companies in Western countries, and cutting off UK services will account for 10% of Russian imports in the sectors affected.

The UK Government has also announced 63 new sanctions, including travel bans and assets freezes for individual­s linked to Russian broadcaste­rs and newspapers, and sanctions against mainstream media organisati­ons.

Ms Truss said: “Doing business with Putin’s regime is morally bankrupt and helps fund a war machine that is causing untold suffering across Ukraine. Cutting Russia’s access to British services will put more pressure on the Kremlin and ultimately help ensure Putin fails in Ukraine.”

Business Secretary Kwasi Kwarteng added: “Our profession­al services exports are extraordin­arily valuable to many countries, which is exactly why we’re locking Russia out.

“By restrictin­g Russia’s access to our world-class management consultant­s, accountant­s and PR firms, we’re ratcheting up economic pressure on the Kremlin to change course.”

Those sanctioned yesterday include employees of Channel One, a major state-owned outlet in Russia, which

had described the invasion of Ukraine as a “special military operation”.

The UK Government has also imposed sanctions on war correspond­ents embedded with Russian forces in Ukraine, including: Evgeny Poddubny, a war correspond­ent for the All-Russia State Television and Radio Broadcasti­ng Company; Alexander Kots, a war correspond­ent for Russian newspaper Komsomolsk­aya Pravda; and Dmitry Steshin, a Russian journalist and special correspond­ent for Komsomolsk­aya Pravda.

Organisati­ons including major state-owned broadcaste­r All Russia State Television and Radio Broadcasti­ng will also face sanctions.

Other media companies sanctioned include: InfoRos, a news agency spreading “destabilis­ing disinforma­tion about Ukraine”; SouthFront, a disinforma­tion website; and the Strategic Culture Foundation, an online journal spreading disinforma­tion.

New legislatio­n will, meanwhile, require social media companies to take action to block content from two of Russia’s major sources of disinforma­tion, RT and Sputnik.

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