'Magnitsky sanctions': who are those being targeted by UK?
The UK foreign secretary, Dominic Raab, has
announced sanctions against 49 individuals and organisations accused of human
rights abuses from four different countries.
Russia
The 25 Russians targeted on Monday include interior
ministry officials, prison doctors and Moscow’s top prosecutor, Alexander
Bastrykin, a close ally of Vladimir Putin.
Bastrykin – who went to university with Putin – is
the most high-profile figure on a list of 25 Russians. The head of the
country’s investigative committee, he is accused of failing to investigate the
mistreatment of Sergei Magnitsky, who was beaten to death in 2009 in a Moscow
detention centre. Bastrykin acted “intentionally or recklessly”, the Foreign
Office alleges
He and the others on the list will now be subject to
UK travel bans and asset freezes. Bastrykin’s inclusion is likely to infuriate
the Kremlin and follows his designation by the US in 2017 under a Magnitsky
law. The prosecutor has previously been accused of threatening to have a
journalist murdered and has presided over a slew of controversial criminal
cases.
At the time of his 2008 arrest Magnitsky had been
investigating a massive tax fraud. The previous year a group of influential
interior ministry officials seized three companies belonging to Hermitage
Capital, a UK-based asset management company. They claimed the firms were
entitled to a tax refund from the state. About $230m was stolen and laundered
through shell companies.
Magnitsky uncovered the scam and was jailed by the
same officials whom he exposed. Those sanctioned on Monday include Dmitry
Kratov, who was the chief medical officer at Butyrka prison, where Magnitsky
was held for some of his time in custody. He was refused medical treatment for
pancreatitis and gallstones and died in an isolation cell after being beaten
up.
The list includes interior ministry investigators
Aleksey Anichin and Oleg Silchenko, who were allegedly complicit in Magnitsky’s
abuse. Also targeted are the two top officials from the investigative committee
of the ministry’s financial crimes department, Gennady Karlov and Natalya
Vonogradova. All are senior career Kremlin bureaucrats.
The government also acted against individuals who
allegedly sought to cover up Magnitsky’s death, which took place at Matrosskaya
Tishina detention centre. The centre’s doctor, Alexandra Gauss, is named,
together with its boss, Fikret Tagiyev, and other senior prison service
figures. They are accused of rejecting Magnitsky’s increasingly desperate pleas
for medical help.
In 2013 a Moscow court found Magnitsky guilty of tax
evasion, even though he was already dead. The sentence in Russia’s first
posthumous trial was read out in front of an empty cage. Bill Browder, the
chief executive of Hermitage Capital, was convicted in absentia at the same
time and sentenced to nine years in jail. Amnesty International condemned the
proceedings as “deeply sinister”.
Others sanctioned include Boris Kibis, who was
involved in pursuing the posthumous case. Another alleged perpetrator is Viktor
Grin, Russia’s deputy general prosecutor. It was Grin who absolved the interior
ministry officials involved in the fraud of wrongdoing. Several judges who sent
Magnitsky to prison were named on Monday, including Aleksey Krivoruchko and
Svetlana Ukhnalyova.
It is not clear what – if any – assets the
sanctioned Russians have in the UK. With the exception of Bastrykin, most are
mid-ranking government officials. The anti-corruption campaigner Alexei Navalny
has claimed Bastrykin has property in the Czech Republic as well as a residence
permit, but he is unlikely to be setting foot in Britain any time soon.
Myanmar
Sanctions were imposed on Monday against Min Aung
Hlaing, the top military commander of Myanmar who was responsible for the
genocide in 2017 against the country’s Rohingya Muslim population. The UK
government accused him of “serious human rights violations” in Rakhine state.
The US imposed sanctions against him last July.
According to the citation, Burma’s armed forces –
the Tatmadaw – took part in “unlawful killings, including through systematic
burning of Rohingya houses and buildings”. They were guilty of “massacre,
torture, forced labour, systematic rape and other forms of targeted sexual
violence, and enforced labour”, the designation said.
Hlaing’s deputy, Soe Win, was also sanctioned. As
well as human rights violations, Win was “involved in the financing of the
Tatmadaw military operations”, the government said. The brutal attacks by the
military and Buddhist mobs led to more than 700,000 Rohingyas fleeing across
the border to Bangladesh, where they are currently living in refugee camps.
North Korea
Two government entities in North Korea were
designated for their role in running a sprawling network of secret prison
camps. The ministries of state security and people’s security were both
sanctioned and served with asset freezes. The two bureaus were implicated in
widespread serious human rights violations, the Foreign Office said.
These had been carried out by camp guards and North
Korean officials against prisoners. The abuses include “murder, torture and
enslavement”. The listing was short on detail but did name one senior official
in charge of the prison system as Kim Jong-ho. It admitted his role had not
been confirmed but said the ministry was in charge of so-called correctional
camps.




