Penticton Herald

Sanctions target Canadian premiers, journalist­s, military

- By MIKE BLANCHFIEL­D

OTTAWA — Russia targeted 61 Canadians — from politician­s to journalist­s — with fresh sanctions on Thursday over Canada’s actions against the country for its invasion of Ukraine.

Many of those named, including provincial premiers, military personnel, political staff and journalist­s, treated their inclusion on the latest list from President Vladimir Putin as a proverbial badge of honour. But others, such as Globe and Mail internatio­nal correspond­ent Mark MacKinnon, saw nothing positive in the developmen­t.

“I’m getting a lot of ‘congratula­tions’ replies to this. But for me, it’s a genuinely sad day. I loved my time living in Russia, and made a lot of friends there (though many of them have left),” MacKinnon said on Twitter.

“I always tried to report honestly about the country. I guess that was the problem.”

Russia has already banned many prominent Canadians from entering the country, including Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, cabinet ministers and MPs from all parties. Deputy Prime Minister Chrystia Freeland was previously banned because she wrote critically about Putin in her past career as a journalist. They were joined Thursday by Bob Rae, Canada’s ambassador to the United Nations, as well as five provincial premiers: Ontario’s Doug Ford, Alberta’s Jason Kenney, British Columbia’s John Horgan, Manitoba’s Heather Stefanson and Saskatchew­an’s Scott Moe.

“Honoured to be included in Putin’s latest blacklist of sanctioned Canadians! My only question: what took so long,” Kenney said on Twitter. He noted that as a former federal Conservati­ve defence minister, he was proud to launch the Canadian Forces military training mission in Ukraine that included sending equipment and satellite technology.

Horgan said his listing was “a badge of honour not for myself but for British Columbia.”

At a news conference Thursday, he said the ban meant that the province and its people caught the attention of a “brutal dictator” by standing up to him, and opening their hearts and homes to Ukrainians.

“So, if the Russians don’t want me to visit, I had no plans to go,” Horgan said. “I guess I’ll scratch that off my list of things to do. It’s no longer on the bucket list, if it ever was.”

Bank of Canada governor Tiff Macklem, the prime minister’s chief of staff Katie Telford and former senator Romeo Dallaire are also on the list.

The Defence Department announced the retirement of two Canadian military leaders on Thursday, several hours after they were sanctioned by Russia. They were vice-admiral Craig Baines, the former commander of the Royal Canadian Navy, and lieutenant-general Al Meinzinger, former commander of the Canadian Air Force.

Several active military leaders are on the Russian list, including Maj.-Gen. Steve Boivin, commander of the special operations forces of the Canadian Armed Forces.

The sanctions also target Canadian journalist­s such as MacKinnon, who formerly served as the Globe’s Moscow correspond­ent and has reported regularly from Ukraine before and during the war, and National Post columnist John Ivison, as well as the editor-in-chief of the Globe and the president and CEO of CBC.

Russia says on its Foreign Ministry website in Russian that these individual­s are all “directly involved in the developmen­t, substantia­tion and implementa­tion of the Russophobi­c course of the ruling regime in Canada.”

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