'Merciless' Russia May Face New Sanctions, EU Says

The European Union’s top diplomat warned Moscow on Tuesday it could face
new sanctions over the jailing of Kremlin critic Alexei Navalny, describing the
government of President Vladimir Putin as “merciless”, authoritarian and afraid
of democracy.
Josep Borrell said his visit last Friday to Moscow had cemented his view
that Russia wanted to break away from Europe and divide the West, in a speech
marking the EU’s harshest criticism of Moscow since Russia’s 2014 annexation of
Crimea.
“The Russian government is going
down a worrisome authoritarian route,” said Borrell, who pleaded for Navalny’s
release in Moscow and sought in vain to visit him in prison.
“There seems to be almost no room
for the development of democratic alternatives ... they are merciless in
stifling any such attempts,” he told the European Parliament, saying that he
believed the Kremlin saw democracy as an “existential threat”.
Borrell’s remarks suggested a hardening of EU attitudes to Russia, a big
energy provider to Europe, after years of seeking better ties despite Western
sanctions imposed in 2014.
“Russia seeks to divide us,” Borrell
said.
Navalny was arrested in January after returning to Russia for the first
time since being poisoned last August in Siberia with what many Western
countries said was a nerve agent.
Navalny blamed Putin for the attack but the Kremlin has dismissed the
accusations and questioned whether the opposition politician was really
poisoned. His arrest and imprisonment have caused big protests in Russia.
During Borrell’s talks with Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov,
which Borrell described as heated, Moscow expelled three EU diplomats from
Germany, Poland and Sweden, provoking tit-for-tat expulsions by Berlin, Warsaw
and Stockholm.
Borrell said he only learned about the expulsions from Russia via social
media during his visit, which included a news conference in which Lavrov chided
the EU as “an unreliable partner”.
Many EU lawmakers said the Kremlin wanted to try to humiliate Borrell on
Friday in Moscow to send a message that the West should stay out of Russian
domestic affairs. At least 81 deputies have called for Borrell’s resignation.
Borrell said targeted sanctions were now an option for Russia, but it
was up to EU states to decide. “Yes, this includes sanctions,” Borrell said of
next policy steps.
Sanction targets
Two allies of Navalny have urged Western envoys to impose sanctions on
senior Russian business and political figures, judges and security chiefs,
Western diplomats said on Tuesday.
The appeal for sanctions by Vladimir Ashurkov and Leonid Volkov during a
video call on Monday was denounced by Moscow on Tuesday as treachery.
Ashurkov and Volkov joined the video call with European Union states and
envoys from Britain, the United States, Canada and Ukraine to propose names of
senior figures in business, political and security circles who could face
sanctions, according to two Western diplomats who were on the call.
The two Western diplomats declined to disclose names, but said Volkov
and Ashurkov told the call that sanctions should target the assets and freedom
to travel of those affected. The aim would be to weaken those who have amassed
fortunes and influence while ordinary Russians struggle to make ends meet.
RIA news agency quoted Russian foreign ministry spokeswoman Maria
Zakharova as saying Navalny’s allies had received instructions on how to
disrupt Russian politics during Monday’s video call. She described members of
Navalny’s Anti-corruption Foundation as “agents of influence” acting on behalf
of the NATO military alliance.