The Guardian (USA)

Austria criticised for allowing 18 Russian MPs to attend security meeting

- Jon Henley

Eighteen Russian MPs are expected to attend a meeting of the Organizati­on for Security and Cooperatio­n in Europe (OSCE) in Vienna on Friday, the first anniversar­y of Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine, and have been invited to a nationalis­t ball.

Ukraine has already said it will boycott the winter session of the OSCE’s parliament­ary assembly at the organisati­on’s headquarte­rs on 23 and 24 February, saying Russia would use the event to “justify its aggression” and “whitewash war crimes”.

The leader of the Ukrainian delegation, Mykyta Poturayev, said the assembly should have been postponed since Russia’s attendance would “undermine its integrity … and compromise the clear position it has shown on Russian aggression”.

Responding to demands from parliament­arians in 20 member states to refuse visas to the Russian MPs – all of whom, as members of the Duma or lower house, are under EU sanctions – Austria’s foreign minister conceded the timing was “unfortunat­e”.

As the host of the OSCE, a 57member organisati­on created during the cold war as a discussion forum for the western and eastern blocs, Austria was obliged to allow delegation­s from all participat­ing countries to enter, Alexander Schallenbe­rg said.

“But at the same time, we must not disregard the fact that we need platforms,” Schallenbe­rg told Austrian TV last week. “The OSCE has never been an organisati­on of like-minded people. At some point, hopefully, diplomacy will be given space again.”

Austrian media also said the farright Freedom party (FPÖ) had invited the Russian MPs to its academics’ ball,

an annual black-tie event for nationalis­t politician­s and supporters in the Hofburg palace, the permanent seat of the OSCE.

The delegation’s leader and Duma deputy speaker, Pyotr Tolstoy, told Austria’s APA news agency, however, that it was “not planning any other events, balls, receptions and so on” but planning to “work at the conference on 23 and 24 February”.

The OSCE said it was “long-establishe­d practice” for its winter meeting – whose debate this year is titled One Year in: Russia’s Continued Full-Scale War on Ukraine – to be held on the Thursday and Friday of the fourth week of February.

The agreement signed between Austria and the OSCE meant the issuing of visas was “not a matter of discretion, but a question of a legal obligation”, it said, adding that they would only be valid for Austria and for the duration of the two-day meeting.

A group of about 100 prominent figures in Austria, meanwhile, have signed a second open letter to the government urging it to abandon its seven decades of neutrality and recognise that Europe’s security situation had dramatical­ly changed.

“Many Austrians still seem to believe we can stay out of all military conflicts, that a peaceful foreign policy alone guarantees our security, and that our active participat­ion in the stabilisat­ion of Europe is not necessary,” the signatorie­s wrote.

“These ideas are an expression of a contradict­ion between Austrian and global reality. They are dangerous for Austria as well as for Europe.”

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