The Sunday Telegraph

Lebedev Sr sanctions put fresh pressure on PM

Ex-KGB officer is given visa ban and asset freeze by Canada, making his son’s peerage ‘look even worse’

- By Nataliya Vasilyeva and Dominic Penna

BORIS JOHNSON is facing renewed pressure to release “critical informatio­n” about the appointmen­t of Lord Lebedev after the peer’s father, a former KGB officer, was subjected to new sanctions by Canada.

Alexander Lebedev, a Russian businessma­n, was one of 15 Russians targeted on Friday with a visa ban and asset freeze over alleged ties to the Kremlin.

Mr Lebedev bought the London Evening Standard and The Independen­t newspapers in 2010 before transferri­ng ownership to his son, Lord Lebedev.

Mr Lebedev is still listed as an active director of Independen­t Print Ltd, which according to its most recent Companies House statement for the year ending 2020 provided outsourced digital publishing services to The Independen­t and Standard.

However, a representa­tive for The Independen­t said that Independen­t Print Ltd had no relationsh­ip with either newspaper.

Lord Lebedev, his son, who has spoken out against the war in Ukraine, received his peerage in 2020. The Government last month missed a deadline to publish security advice linked to his ennoblemen­t after a Commons vote and questions over the extent of the Prime Minister’s personal involvemen­t.

Angela Rayner, the deputy Labour leader, said: “Labour has been clear that anyone with links to the KGB must face sanctions. The Conservati­ves have been so slow and too soft in issuing sanctions to those with links to Putin.

“There is now an extremely strong case for Alexander Lebedev to face sanctions from the UK and the Government must now urgently look at the evidence. Boris Johnson has form when it comes to protecting the Lebedevs. He failed to release critical informatio­n relating to the appointmen­t of Alexander Lebedev’s son to the House of Lords, despite concerns from the security services. This is another case of the Prime Minister bending the rules to protect his friends.”

Bill Browder, a financier whose campaignin­g for effective sanctions against oligarchs was central to the introducti­on of the Magnitsky Act, said the news created a “huge conundrum in British politics”. He added: “I think it’s quite explosive because generally when you sanction an oligarch you should also be looking at his family members and his son is in the House of Lords.

“It certainly doesn’t look good – it didn’t look good on the surface, but now it looks even worse.”

Ms Rayner’s renewed call for transparen­cy comes after Labour had urged the Government to comply fully with the Commons vote requiring the release of informatio­n.

Earlier this month, the party said the public “have a right to know the truth” about the extent of Mr Johnson’s alleged involvemen­t. Mr Lebedev, 62, served at the Soviet Embassy in London in the 1980s and has built a fortune in Russia in banking and airline companies.

He was not among the group of Russia’s richest men invited to the Kremlin to meet Vladimir Putin in the first week of the invasion of Ukraine, nor has he been seen in public or made any statements since the war began on Feb 24.

Amid questions from opposition politician­s about his peerage in March, Lord Lebedev said earlier this year: “I have nothing to hide. I have no links to the Kremlin. Never even been inside apart from the museum.”

Both Downing Street and Lord Lebedev have pointed to his business and philanthro­pic activities, including raising £75million for charitable causes, as reasons for his elevation to the Lords.

A government spokesman said: “This government has been resolute in standing up to Russian aggression.

“We keep all sanctions under review and they are determined after careful considerat­ion.”

Mr Lebedev and Lord Lebedev’s office were contacted for comment.

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