
Russia imposes sanctions on 15 MPs and six members of the House of Lords
Russia imposes sanctions on 15 MPs and six members of the House of Lords, banning them from the country over what it called 'hostile statements and unfounded accusations' about Moscow.
The Russian foreign affairs ministry published a statement on Wednesday accusing the UK of 'fabricating anti-Russian narratives' and attempting to 'demonise' the country.
The ministry announced sanctions against 21 British politicians from across the political spectrum, targeting parliamentarians who have called for frozen Russian assets to be seized and used to fund Ukraine's war effort.
Those sanctioned include Labour MPs Phil Brickell, Jeevun Sandher, Johanna Baxter and Blair McDougall, and the Liberal Democrats' Alistair Carmichael, Chris Coghlan, Helen Maguire and James MacCleary.
Stephen Gethins of the Scottish National party and Jim Shannon of the Democratic Unionist party were also on the list.
McDougall, who is a member of the foreign affairs select committee, said that 'being targeted by this thuggish, criminal regime is a compliment. That among the reasons is that I have been rude to Putin shows how brittle and pathetic his regime is. This won't stop British MPs from speaking up for the people of Ukraine.'
Brickell, another member of the committee, said: 'I've been to Ukraine – I've seen the death and destruction Putin has wrought there over the last three years. So if he thinks that sanctioning myself and colleagues will get us to shut up he has another thing coming. Putin and his cronies must pay for the crimes they have committed. Slava Ukraini.'
Sandher, a member of the Treasury committee, said: 'Almost a century ago, British politicians made the mistake of letting dictators like Putin redraw Europe's borders by force. That led to the most destructive war in humanity's history. We should be doing everything we can to stop that happening again. If that means me being sanctioned by Russia, so be it.'
Maguire, who is her party's defence spokesperson, posted on X that she and other Liberal Democrat MPs would 'wear this retaliatory sanction as a badge of honour'.
All four MPs quoted have in recent months called for the UK to work with allies to seize frozen Russian central bank assets and use them to support Ukraine.
The UK government has long advocated for frozen Russian assets to be seized, but its position became more pronounced this year after an endorsement by David Lammy, the foreign secretary.
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Other European governments such as France and Germany and institutions such as the European Central Bank are reticent over fears that such a move would breach the principle of the immunity of sovereign assets, deterring investment from countries such as China and Saudi Arabia.
The peers sanctioned by Moscow included David Alton, a cross-bencher who chairs the joint committee on human rights, Kevan Jones, a former Labour MP who was a member of the intelligence and security committee when it published its Russia report, and Ross Kempsell, the Conservative peer who is a former special adviser to Boris Johnson.
Of the 15 MPs sanctioned, 13 were from the 2024 parliamentary intake. In 2022, Russia sanctioned 287 MPs after the UK took action against Russian politicians over the invasion of Ukraine.
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