Western Morning News

Russians blamed by No 10 for hoax calls

- DAVID HUGHES Press Associatio­n

THE UK has publicly blamed Vladimir Putin’s Russia for hoax calls targeting British ministers in the hope of securing sensitive or embarrassi­ng informatio­n.

Home Secretary Priti Patel and Defence Secretary Ben Wallace both spoke to imposters posing as the Ukrainian prime minister, while an unsuccessf­ul attempt was also made to target Culture Secretary Nadine Dorries.

Mr Wallace said at the time of the incident last week he believed Russia was to blame and Downing Street has now publicly pointed the finger at the Kremlin.

The Prime Minister’s official spokesman said: “The Russian state was responsibl­e for the hoax telephone calls made to UK ministers last week.

“This is standard practice for Russian informatio­n operations and disinforma­tion is a tactic straight from the Kremlin playbook to try to distract from their illegal activities in Ukraine and the human rights abuses being committed there.

“We are seeing a string of distractio­n stories and outright lies from the Kremlin, reflecting Putin’s desperatio­n as he seeks to hide the scale of the conflict and Russia’s failings on the battlefiel­d.”

Senior Government sources fear the Russians may attempt to doctor footage obtained in the calls in an attempt to embarrass the UK.

Mr Wallace publicly acknowledg­ed he had been targeted shortly after his call last Thursday in an attempt to get ahead of any attempt by Moscow to circulate footage from it.

He also launched a cross-Whitehall investigat­ion to understand how he ended up on a video call with a hoaxer pretending to be Ukrainian prime minister Denys Shmyhal.

Boris Johnson was due to discuss the war in Ukraine with US President Joe Biden and counterpar­ts from other allies last night ahead of a summit of Nato leaders on Thursday.

According to the latest MoD assessment, the Russian advance on Kyiv remains stalled in the face of determined Ukrainian resistance, with the bulk of Moscow’s forces still more than 15 miles from the centre. Neverthele­ss, analysts believe the capital is still the Kremlin’s main military objective, although it is thought the Russians will try to force it into submission through encircleme­nt rather than attempting a direct assault.

The UN’s refugee agency said around 3.5 million people had fled Ukraine since the February 24 invasion, while millions more are still in the country but have been forced out of their homes.

Britain could welcome hundreds of thousands of those fleeing the fighting in Ukraine in the coming weeks, Health Secretary Sajid Javid said.

After the Government’s Homes for Ukraine scheme opened at the weekend, Mr Javid said those arriving in the UK would get all the support they needed. He defended Ms Patel’s insistence that security checks are needed on refugees from the war to prevent Russian spies infiltrati­ng the country. At the Conservati­ve spring forum in Blackpool at the weekend, Ms Patel said it was “naive” to assume that, just because most people arriving in the UK were women and children, there could not be Kremlin agents among them.

Mr Javid said that while any checks should be “proportion­ate” the Salisbury nerve agent attack in 2018 underlined the need to be vigilant.

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