Gulf News

Europeans to take new steps against Russia over UK spy attack

Moscow slams EU backing for British accusation­s

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European Union member states agreed at a summit in Brussels to take further punitive steps against Russia in the coming days for the nerve agent attack in Salisbury, as Moscow accused the bloc of joining a London-driven hate campaign against it.

Late on Thursday, in a boost for British Prime Minister Theresa May, the 28-member EU collective­ly condemned the attack on a former Russian spy and said it was “highly likely” Moscow was responsibl­e. They also recalled the EU ambassador to Russia.

“Additional steps are expected as early as Monday at the national level,” summit chair Donald Tusk told reporters.

French President Emmanuel Macron said Paris and Berlin would be among countries taking further rapid and coordinate­d measures which other leaders said would include the expulsion of Russian officials and possible other retaliator­y actions.

Standing beside Macron and echoing his view that Russia had breached the sovereignt­y and security of the Union, German Chancellor Angela Merkel told a joint news conference that EU countries would debate what measures to take “and then act”.

One senior official familiar with discussion­s said the extent of measures in the coming weeks could be “surprising” and not confined to expulsions. There is no talk of more economic sanctions, whose enforcemen­t has divided the EU in the past.

Czech expulsion

Czech Prime Minister Andrej Babis said he was likely to announce the expulsion of several people on Monday, after returning to Prague and consulting with his foreign minister.

Lithuanian President Dalia Grybauskai­te said she was ready to expel Russian spies, whose activities she said were deeply harmful: “It is certain that a coordinate­d action will be taken next week, maybe at the start of it,” she said. “It’s absolutely obvious that the network exists and that it acts aggressive­ly.” Romanian President Klaus Iohannis stressed that national government­s wanted to retain control of the details in an area where they guard their sovereignt­y from Brussels. But most of those present would go home and prepare suitable steps.

Russia has denied responsibi­lity for the March 4 attack on former Russian spy Sergei Skripal and his daughter, the first known offensive use of a nerve toxin in Europe since World War Two. A British judge said on Thursday that both victims may have suffered brain damage from the attack.

Moscow retaliated against May’s move to expel 23 Russians by announcing the expulsion of the same number of Britons.

Yesterday, the Russian foreign ministry described the EU accusation as “baseless” and accused the bloc of spurning cooperatio­n with Moscow and joining “another anti-Russian campaign deployed by London and its allies overseas with an obvious goal: to put another obstacle on the path to the normalisat­ion of the situation on the European continent”.

In Moscow, the expulsion of British diplomats went ahead, a convoy of minibuses speeding out of the embassy compound to applause after British embassy staff said their goodbyes in the courtyard under a light snowfall.

A special charter flight was expected to fly the diplomats back to Britain later yesterday.

France’s Foreign Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian, on a visit to Kiev, signalled that Paris was considerin­g expelling Russian diplomats in solidarity with Britain. “You will see,” he said.

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