The Free Press Journal

Russia ready to cut ties if EU ups sanctions, diplomat says

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Russia is prepared to cut ties with the European Union if the EU imposes new sanctions amid a dispute over the treatment of opposition leader Alexei Navalny, the nation’s top diplomat warned Friday.

In response to a question on Moscow’s willingnes­s to rupture formal relations with the EU, Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said in televised remarks that Russia doesn’t want to be isolated but is ready to retaliate if the EU action hurts its economy.

“If we see again, as we have felt more than once, that sanctions imposed in some areas create risks to our economy, including in the most sensitive spheres, then yes,” Lavrov said. “We don’t want to be isolated from internatio­nal life, but we must be ready for that. If you want peace, you must prepare for war.” Russia-EU relations have sunk to new lows over Navalny’s arrest and imprisonme­nt. The opposition leader was arrested

Jan. 17 upon his return from Germany, where he spent five months recuperati­ng from the nerve agent poisoning he blamed on the Kremlin. Russian authoritie­s have denied the allegation­s.

Last week, a court in Moscow sent Navalny to prison for two years and eight months for violating terms of his probation while recuperati­ng in Germany. The probation stemmed from a 2014 embezzleme­nt conviction that Navalny has rejected as fabricated and the European Court of Human Rights has ruled to be unlawful.

European Union foreign policy chief Josep Borrell said after visiting Russia last week that the 27-nation bloc must take a firm stance in its relations with Russia and ponder new sanctions in the wake of Navalny’s prison sentence. While Borrell was meeting with Lavrov, Moscow announced the expulsion of diplomats from Germany, Poland and Sweden for attending protests in support of Navalny. The three EU countries responded in kind Monday, each expelling a Russian diplomat.

Borrell has said he plans to submit proposals for possible actions against Russia when he chairs the next meeting of the bloc’s foreign ministers on Feb. 22. Navalny’s arrest triggered a wave of protests across Russia that drew tens of thousands of people to the streets in the largest show of discontent in years. Authoritie­s responded with a sweeping crackdown, detaining about 11,000 people across Russia. Many protesters were fined or given jail sentences ranging from seven to 15 days.

The United States and the European Union have urged Russia to release Navalny and to end the crackdown on protests. The Kremlin has accused them of meddling in Russia’s inter nal affairs and said it would not listen to Western criticism of Navalny’s sentencing and police actions against his supporters.

In pursuance of the vision of Prime Minister of ‘Atmanirbha­r Bharat’ and ‘Digital India’ under the leadership of Minister of Railways and Minister for Commerce and Industry and Consumer Affairs, Food and Distributi­on Piyush Goyal, IRCTC has recently upgraded its user inter face of the internet ticketing website of railways www.irctc.co.in for seamless booking experience. The internet ticketing website besides being one of the largest ecommerce websites in Asia pacific books 83% of the total reserved tickets over the Indian railways.

Taking a step further to enhance ticket booking experience, IRCTC has introduced a strikingly new feature of instant refund to IRCTC Website / Mobile App users using “IRCTC iPay”. IRCTC has now equipped its payment gateway “i-Pay” with “AutoPay” feature. In this feature, a user has to allow for debit to his UPI bank account other payment instrument through a mandate facility which creates a lien on his payment instrument. AutoPay feature ensures higher reliabilit­y of ticket booking through the pre-authorized mandate as it reduces the user ’s time in keying in the payment instrument details. This feature also tends to minimize the refund time for Tatkal bookings for the transactio­ns that remain waitlisted and attract auto cancellati­on. /

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