UK imposes sanctions on Russian prison staff
SENIOR Russian prison officials who helped to enlist convicted criminals to fight in Ukraine have been targeted in the latest round of UK sanctions, the Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office announced yesterday.
Arkady Gostev, director of Russia’s Federal Penitentiary Service, and Dmitry Bezrukikh, head of the Federal Punishment Service of the Rostov region, are among 22 officials to be made the subject of asset freezes and travel bans.
The FCDO said the two men are reported to have worked closely with Yevgeny Prigozhin, head of the notorious Wagner Group of mercenaries, which has been linked with some of the worst atrocities in the conflict, to fill its ranks with inmates from Russia’s jails.
Prisoners – including murderers and sex offenders – were offered pardons from President Vladimir Putin if they agreed to sign up to fight in Ukraine. Sanctions have also been imposed on officials associated with the partial mobilisation of Russian reservists, including deputy prime minister Denis Valentinovich Manturov, who is responsible for equipping the troops.
Ella Pamfilova, chairwoman of the Central Election Commission, and Andrey Burov, head of the regional election commission in Rostov, who are said to have been responsible for organising a series of “sham” referendums in occupied areas of Ukraine, have also been targeted.
Announcing the sanctions yesterday, Foreign Secretary James Cleverly said: “The Russian regime’s decision to partially mobilise Russian citizens was a desperate attempt to overwhelm the valiant Ukrainians defending their territory. It has failed.
“Today we have sanctioned individuals who have enforced this conscription, sending thousands of Russian citizens to fight in Putin’s illegal and abhorrent war. The UK will continue to use both sanctions and military aid to support Ukraine in the defence of their independence.”
Antony Blinken, United States Secretary of State, has condemned Russia’s assault on Ukraine’s power grid, saying that Moscow had turned its war machine to such strikes in order to “turn off the heat... so that civilians suffer”.
Mr Blinken spoke at a Nato foreign ministers meeting in Bucharest, Romania, devoted in part to coordinating aid to keep the lights – and furnaces – on in Ukraine, where Russian strikes have damaged an estimated third of the country’s electrical infrastructure.
The top US diplomat said: “Because President Putin is failing to defeat Ukraine militarily, he is now prosecuting war against civilians, and he’s doing that by trying to destroy Ukraine’s energy infrastructure, to turn off the light, to turn off the heat, to turn off the water, so that civilians suffer.”
Mr Blinken said it was “very clear” that “support remains strong, resolute, determined” on behalf of Nato foreign ministers to continue supporting Ukraine as Russia’s invasion continues.
Ukraine’s foreign minister, Dmytro Kuleba, has underlined that his country’s biggest needs now are electrical equipment, such as transformers, and more advanced airdefence systems than it has gained from Nato allies so far, to deal with the Russian missile strikes. Mr Kuleba held talks with Mr Blinken at the Nato gathering yesterday.