Britain's Clampdown: Sanctions on Russian Officials and Media
Britain has imposed sanctions on Russian officials, media operatives, and organizations for their alleged involvement in deporting and indoctrinating Ukrainian children. Ukraine reports nearly 20,000 children have been illegally sent to Russia and Belarus, with a UN investigation labeling these actions as crimes against humanity.
Britain has announced new sanctions against multiple Russian officials, media entities, and organizations. The move targets Kremlin-backed youth programs and the deportation of Ukrainian children.
Ukraine claims that nearly 20,000 children have been forcibly relocated to Russia and Belarus. A United Nations investigation in March classified these actions as crimes against humanity. "Today's sanctions are a decisive step to expose and undermine Russia's measures, interfere and damage democracy, and threaten Ukraine's future by deporting and indoctrinating Ukrainian children," declared Foreign Minister Yvette Cooper in a statement.
Russia's London embassy deemed the sanctions as unjustified and baseless, rejecting allegations of forced child transfers. Since the 2022 invasion of Ukraine, Britain has enforced sanctions on over 3,200 individuals, businesses, and ships in its Russia sanctions regime, primarily affecting Russia's oil-related revenues but now increasingly focusing on those impacting people.
(With inputs from agencies.)
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