Advertisement

EU, Britain sanction Russian officials over Navalny poisoning

FILE PHOTO: Russian opposition leader Navalny attends a rally to demand the release of jailed protesters in Moscow

By Robin Emmott

BRUSSELS (Reuters) - The European Union and Britain imposed sanctions on top Russian officials close to President Vladimir Putin on Thursday in an unexpectedly robust and swift response to the August poisoning of Kremlin critic Alexei Navalny.

Pushed by France and Germany, where Navalny was treated after collapsing on a flight from Siberia, the EU and Britain targeted six Russians and a state scientific research centre accused of deploying a banned nerve agent designed for military use against the 44-year-old opposition politician.

"We Europeans remain committed to the fight against chemical weapons," French President Emmanuel Macron told reporters as he arrived at an EU summit. He called for talks with Moscow.

The Kremlin condemned the sanctions as a deliberate and unfriendly step against Moscow and promised retaliation.

Unlike the poisoning of a former Russian spy in Britain in 2018, when the EU took almost a year to sanction military intelligence agents, the bloc targeted officials it believes planned and helped carry out the poisoning.

Despite Britain's departure from the EU, London is still coordinating some sanctions with the bloc, in part to avoid allowing those targeted to move their assets, diplomats say.

Andrei Yarin, head of the presidential policy directorate, Sergei Kiriyenko, Putin's first deputy chief of staff, Sergei Menyaylo, Putin's envoy to Siberia, Alexander Bortnikov, the director of Russia's Federal Security Service and two deputy defence ministers were targeted.

TRAVEL BANS AND ASSET FREEZES

The State Scientific Research Institute for Organic Chemistry and Technology was also sanctioned.

"The deployment of a toxic nerve agent of the Novichok group would ... only be possible due to the failure of the Institute to carry out its responsibility to destroy the stockpiles of chemical weapons," the Official Journal said.

Moscow has rejected accusations that Navalny was poisoned with a Soviet-style Novichok nerve agent in an attempt to murder him and has said there were no grounds for sanctions.

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said there was no logic to the decision and the sanctions had harmed relations.

Russian businessman Evgeny Prigozhin, who has been indicted in the United States for interfering with the 2016 U.S. elections, was also separately sanctioned by the EU, accused of breaking a United Nations arms embargo on Libya.

The travel bans and asset freezes confirmed a Reuters report on Wednesday.

Paris and Berlin say they have not had a credible explanation from Moscow for what the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons said was Novichok in Navalny's body.

In the 2018 British case of the poisoning of Russian double agent Sergei Skripal and his daughter, traces of Novichok were also found.

Navalny is recovering in Germany.

(Additional reporting by Sarah Young and Guy Falconbridge in London and Alexander Marrow and Dmitry Antonov in Moscow; Editing by Andrew Cawthorne, Giles Elgood, William Maclean)