Russia bans entry to five UK nationals including Washington Post journalist

Other Britons named under the ban were Alexander ​Browder, a contributor for the Henry Jackson Society policy think ⁠tank; Alice Laugher, chief executive of humanitarian staffing firm Committed to Good; and Richard ⁠Westbury, ​chairman of the Chelsea Group, parent company of Committed to Good. The UK is among countries which imposed sanctions ⁠on Russia, including travel bans, after Moscow's annexation of Crimea from Ukraine in ⁠2014.


Reuters | June 3 (Reuters) - Russia Has Banned Five ​British Nationals | Updated: 03-06-2026 05:43 IST | Created: 03-06-2026 05:43 IST
Russia bans entry to five UK nationals including Washington Post journalist

Russia has banned five ​British nationals, including The Washington ​Post journalist Catherine Belton and ‌The i ​Paper correspondent Richard Holmes, from entering the country, the foreign ministry said on ‌its website late on Tuesday. Belton is an investigative correspondent focusing on Russia and previously reported about the country for the Financial Times and ‌Reuters among other media. Holmes, an award-winning investigative journalist and ‌a Pulitzer Prize finalist, is a security correspondent at Britain's The i Paper.

The foreign ministry said the entry ban was an answer to the "provocative anti-Russian ⁠rhetoric ​of British officials, ⁠the spread of insinuations about Russia, and London's practical steps to supply the ⁠Kyiv regime with weapons". Other Britons named under the ban were Alexander ​Browder, a contributor for the Henry Jackson Society policy think ⁠tank; Alice Laugher, chief executive of humanitarian staffing firm Committed to Good; and Richard ⁠Westbury, ​chairman of the Chelsea Group, parent company of Committed to Good.

The UK is among countries which imposed sanctions ⁠on Russia, including travel bans, after Moscow's annexation of Crimea from Ukraine in ⁠2014. Those ⁠measures expanded following Russia's full-scale invasion in 2022. Moscow has also imposed sanctions, including travel bans, in ‌retaliation.

(This story has not been edited by Devdiscourse staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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