The Manila Times

US blacklists Putin ally, alleged Litvinenko killers

- AFP

WASHINGTON: The United States on Monday blackliste­d Russian President Vladimir Putin’s reputed top enforcer and the prime suspects in the murder of ex-spy Alexander Litvinenko in London a decade ago.

The US Treasury added Russia’s senior federal investigat­or Alexander Bastrykin and alleged assassins Andrei Lugovoi and Dmitri Kovtun to the Magnitsky Act sanctions list.

Announcing the decision, the State Department did not detail what the new targets are accused of, but the move comes at a time of increased diplomatic tension with Moscow.

“Each of the most recently added names was considered after extensive research,” spokesman John Kirby said.

Kirby said the targeted names have “roles in the repressive machinery of Russia’s law enforcemen­t systems, as well as individual­s involved in notorious human rights violations.”

President Barack Obama’s outgoing administra­tion has accused the Kremlin of using cyber espionage, targeted leaks and propaganda in a bid

US President-elect Donald Trump was angered when American intelligen­ce agencies warned of the Russian hacking, alleging that they were behind a “witch hunt” to tarnish his win.

Moscow has scornfully rejected the charges, echoing Trump’s “witch hunt” charge.

- sian diplomats in response and Monday’s decision targeted a close Putin ally.

- nitsky Act had still not included Putin himself, a not want a complete breakdown in ties.

Polonium-laced tea

with Russia in areas in which it is in the US national interest,” the official told AFP on condition of anonymity.

“This includes pressing for diplomatic solutions to the crises in Syria and eastern Ukraine,” he added.

“Our goal in imposing sanctions is to change clear that interferen­ce in US democratic processes will not go unanswered.”

Bastrykin is one of the Russian president’s most powerful allies and is head of an investigat­ive agency that had led crackdowns on domestic dissidents.

after allegedly threatenin­g to have him killed, and in Russian politics.

main suspects in the death of Litvinenko, who succumbed to radiation poisoning in London in 2006 after drinking polonium-laced tea.

In January last year, after a British inquiry, judge Robert Owen said he was sure that Lugovoi and Kovtun had put polonium-210 in Litvinenko’s tea

Litvinenko was a former Russian agent turned freelance investigat­or who had collaborat­ed with British intelligen­ce.

The British inquiry concluded that the murder had probably been ordered by the then head of Russia’s FSB intelligen­ce agency and had been personally approved by Putin himself.

British intelligen­ce

Lugovoi, a member of Russia’s lower house of parliament, has denied the charge, which is based British security services.

Russia has refused to extradite the men for questionin­g.

The Magnitsky Act was originally passed to en implicated in the 2009 prison death of Russian tax fraud whistleblo­wer Sergei Magnitsky.

But more individual­s have been blackliste­d over the years.

The target list now includes 44 names of those who are barred from doing business with Americans or receiving US visas.

The act allows for the designatio­n of those implicated in the murder, torture or persecutio­n of those who reveal corruption in Russia, Kirby explained.

The US authoritie­s also added two less well - nady Plaksin, to the list.

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