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chancy
1st June 2015, 01:24
Hello Everyone:
The easy way to get everyone upset at you is to do what they do.....
chancy


Link:
http://edition.cnn.com/2015/05/31/europe/russia-travel-ban/index.html?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+CnnRegions+%28CNN+Regions%29&ref=yfp


Article:
Russia's travel ban against 89 EU officials sparks fury

By Monica Sarkar, CNN

Updated 1445 GMT (2145 HKT) May 31, 2015
Russia has issued a travel ban against 89 European politicians and military leaders from 17 countries.

Russia's travel ban against 89 European politicians and military leaders angers the EU
An unnamed Russian official reportedly says the blacklist is a response to EU sanctions on Russia
A UK Foreign Office spokeswoman tells CNN the ban is unjustified and Russia has provided no legal basis for it

(CNN)Russia's travel ban against 89 European politicians and military leaders from 17 countries has sparked an angry reaction from the EU.

"We consider this measure as totally arbitrary and unjustified, especially in the absence of any further clarification and transparency," an EU spokesperson said in a statement.

A UK Foreign Office spokeswoman told CNN, "There is absolutely no justification for this list. And the Russian authorities have not provided any legal basis for the list or for the names on it.

"If Russia thinks this action will cause the EU to change its position on sanctions, it is wrong. The way for Russia to get the sanctions lifted is to remove its troops from Ukraine and comply with its obligations under the Minsk agreements. The EU and member states are urgently seeking more transparency from the Russian authorities for this move," she added.

An unnamed, high-ranking official at the Russian Foreign Ministry reportedly told Tass, the Russian news agency, that the ministry does not wish to respond.

"We would like to refrain from comments on names of the people who were barred from entering the Russian Federation, although (their surnames) appeared in some media outlets. At the same time, we confirm that similar lists have been handed to our European partners."

He also suggested that the publication of some of the names on the list may have made matters worse, as they "were handed to our European partners as a gesture of trust and their publication may weigh on the conscience of corresponding sides.

"Just one thing remains unclear," he added. "Did our European co-workers want these lists to minimise inconveniences for potential 'denied persons' or to stage another political show?"

The official also said that the list is a direct response to EU sanctions on Russia.

"An answer to some European countries demanding to explain why these names have been put on the lists of persons banned from entering Russia is quite simple: this was done as a response to a sanctions campaign unleashed against Russia by some Germany-led countries of the European Union."

Although certain U.S. names are on the list, he said, "it should be mentioned that in this case our American partners act more constructively than the European ones."

Western sanctions on Russia have hit the country hard. Sanctions imposed over Moscow's annexation of Crimea and support for separatist rebels in eastern Ukraine cost Russia $26.7 billion in 2014, and the figure could rise to $80 billion this year, Russian Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev said in April.

Martin Schulz, president of the European Parliament, accused Russia of not being transparent: "Despite my numerous previous official requests to the Russian authorities to make the blacklist public and communicate the clear reasons why each individual has been included there, our Members have been repeatedly stopped at the border and the European Parliament has not been officially notified which of its Members are being targeted by the sanctions," he said in a statement.

He concluded that he would "speak to Russia's Ambassador to the EU" on Monday and take matters further, if necessary.

My reaction on the reported #Russian #blacklist of European politicians and officials including several #MEPs http://t.co/Il4MtgHgpc
— EP President (@EP_President) May 30, 2015

The list allegedly includes former British Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg.

"Nick Clegg played a leading role in the last government against Russian aggression in Ukraine," a Liberal Democrat spokesperson told CNN. "We can safely assume that Nick being banned from Russia is a reaction against this. Nick remains a fierce and vocal critic of Vladimir Putin and his regime."

Belgian politician Mark Demesmaeker tweeted his reaction to apparently seeing his name on the list: "Putin puts me on his black list. Not welcome in Russia. Too much honour for me, Mr Putin!"

Putin puts me on his black list. Not welcome in Russia. Too much honour for me, Mr Putin! pic.twitter.com/eZZDJ63jVY
— Mark Demesmaeker (@markdemesmaeker) May 29, 2015

Ukraine's ambassador to the Republic of Latvia, Yevgen Perebyinis, also tweeted a sarcastic response: "#Russia's "black list" of EU politicans is the list of most devoted friends of #Ukraine. Honoured to see 5 Latvians among them. Thank you!"

#Russia's "black list" of EU politicians is the list of most devoted friends of #Ukraine. Honoured to see 5 Latvians among them. Thank you!
— Yevgen Perebyinis (@YPerebyinis) May 30, 2015

Gunnar Hokmark, a Swedish member of the European Parliament, tweeted his thoughts on a more serious, underlying issue: "Worth to note the Putinregime fears dialogue and freedom of speech, the #Blacklist is not a show of strength but of weakness, #Russia."

Worth to note the Putinregime fears dialogue and freedom of speech, the #Blacklist is not a show of strength but of weakness, Russia

lucidity
1st June 2015, 15:50
Hello Siblings,

This is clearly an unbalanced account
(spread through the western media)

The EU did exactly this to Russia... (embargoes on prominent Russians)
at the time, it was supposedly in response to Ukraine.

They (the EU) produced a list of Russian officials,
Russian entrepreneurs, Russian Generals & other military officers.
And basically said.... you people can't come into the EU.

There was also this business of the EU using
the Swift payment infrastructure to block
accounts held by prominent Russians
(presumably the same officials/entrepreneurs/generals/military etc).

This apparently really upset the Russians.
They're now building their own version of swift for the whole of Russia and China
(Probably it will be used by all the Bricks countries in the long term)
Ooops... that back fired quite badly on the Swift people.

This isn't Russia trying to piss off the Europeans, it's Russia doing tit-for-tat.

I'm surprised Russia has waited this long to respond.
News of the original sanctions against the prominent Russians is several months old.

be happy :-)

lucidity

animovado
1st June 2015, 16:44
http://on.rt.com/50hex1
‘Below the belt’: Foreign ministry slams Western diplomats for disclosing Russian blacklists
Published time: June 01, 2015 09:57
Edited time: June 01, 2015 16:02

The Russian Foreign Ministry has expressed disappointment at their Western colleagues for publicizing lists of people subject to personal sanctions in Russia. They called such measures a threat to mutual trust.

“When European partners surpass all boundaries, it can’t cause anything but disappointment. How can we trust such partners?” Deputy Foreign Minister Aleksey Meshkov told Interfax.

The comment came soon after Finnish mass media published a list of people included in Russia’s blacklist, introduced as a reply to the Western policy of personal sanctions that started in 2014.

Meshkov elaborated that the Russian blacklist was formed over 12 months ago, after a similar action against Russian officials was undertaken by the European Union. He emphasized that every inclusion in the list was backed up by a number of reasons. The diplomat also told reporters the list was transferred to European diplomats after repeated requests and on condition of non-disclosure.

“We do not consider this as a political demarche. We simply wanted to ease the lives of those who are on this list. All that happened afterwards lies completely on our European partners’ conscience,” Meshkov noted.

The official explained the initial request from the EU was apparently prompted by the need to save time and effort of people, who suspected they were banned from entering Russia, and didn’t want to apply for visas if they were to be refused anyway.
Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov commented on the situation with blacklists on Monday: “We didn’t want to make this public. When the European Union introduced restrictions on 150 Russian citizens we did the same, but targeted a smaller number of EU citizens. We didn’t want to follow the EU’s bad example and turn the disclosure of these names into a loud campaign,” Lavrov said.

Deputy director of the Foreign Ministry’s Information Directorate, Mariya Zakharova, described Russia’s stance on the problem in an extensive Facebook post published on Sunday. She said the blacklist was sent to EU officials confidentially and after repeated requests, only to be immediately disclosed to the press.

“Gentlemen, this was below the belt,” Zakharova wrote. She also claimed Russian diplomats had long ago stopped being surprised at the dishonesty of their Western partners, but this time it was on a shocking scale.

“Sanctions policies not approved by the UN Security Council are an aimless action that has never yielded any positive result,” she wrote.