Russia to expel 4 British diplomats(1)
·Kamynin said Russia will also stop issuing visas to British officials.·Russian officials will also stop visits to Britain due to visa disputes, Kamynin added.
British Ambassador to Moscow Tony Brenton leaves Russia's Foreign Ministry in Moscow July 19, 2007. Russia said on Thursday it would expel four British diplomats from Moscow, retaliating for Britain's decision earlier this week to send home four Russian diplomats. (Xinhua/Reuters Photo)
"The British ambassador has received a note declaring four employees of the British Embassy persona non-grata, and saying they must leave Moscow within ten days," Foreign Ministry spokesman Mikhail Kamynin was quoted as saying.
Kamynin said Russia will also stop issuing visas to British officials and halt counter-terrorism cooperation with Britain in response to London's decision to expel four Russian diplomats.
Russian officials will also stop visits to Britain due to visa disputes, Kamynin added.
British Ambassador to Russia Anthony Brenton was summoned to the Russian Foreign Ministry earlier Thursday. He declined to give details on the meeting but said he had received several messages from the Russian side and would send them back to London.
British Foreign Secretary David Miliband said on Monday that Britain would expel four diplomats from the Russian embassy in London due to Russia's refusal to extradite a main suspect in the poisoning case, Andrei Lugovoi, who was accused of murdering Litvinenko.
Speaking at the House of Commons, Miliband also said Britain would suspend visa facilitation negotiation with Russia.
Litvinenko died of radioactive poisoning, from Polonium 210, in London on Nov. 23. Experts investigating his death found radiation traces at a dozen locations and on two British Airways airplanes that flew the Moscow-London route.
Lugovoi, a business partner of Litvinenko and also a former KGB agent, met him at a London hotel on Nov. 1. Litvinenko fell ill on that day and died weeks later in a London hospital.
On July 5, Russia's Prosecutor General's Office formally rejected Britain's request for the extradition of Lugovoi.
Russia has said its rejection was based both on a constitutional ban on turning Russian citizens over to foreign countries, and on a European convention that allows signatories to refuse to extradite their nationals.
British Ambassador to Moscow Tony Brenton leaves Russia's Foreign Ministry in Moscow July 19, 2007. (Xinhua/Reuters Photo)
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UK to expel four Russian diplomats
LONDON, July 16 (Xinhua) -- British Foreign Secretary David Miliband announced on Monday that Britain will expel four diplomats from Russian embassy in London in response to Russia's refusal to extradite Andrei Lugovoi accused by Britain of murdering former KGB agent Alexander Litvinenko.
Speaking at the House of Commons, Miliband said "This is a situation the government has not sought and does not welcome. But we have no choice but to address it."
Russian lawmakers slam British FM in spy row
MOSCOW, July 17 (Xinhua) -- The suggestion by British Foreign Secretary David Miliband that Russia should adjust its constitution is a direct interference in Russian internal affairs, State Duma deputies said on Tuesday.
Miliband's recommendation that Russia should amend the fundamental law for making possible the extradition of Russian citizens "goes beyond the common sense and should be viewed as an attempt to interfere in our internal affairs," Just Russia faction leader Alexander Babakov was quoted by the Itar-Tass news agency as saying.
Russia slashes UK decision to expel 4 diplomats
MOSCOW, July 16 (Xinhua) -- Russia criticized on Monday Britain's decision to expel four Russian diplomats in retaliation after its strive for extraditing a spy-poisoning case Russian suspect was rejected.
Russian FM: Litvinenko case influences Russia-Britain relations
MOSCOW, June 1 (Xinhua) -- The Litvinenko case is influencing Russia-Britain relations, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov told reporters Friday.
"One can feel such an influence, because we see that Britain tries to use the criminal case to engineer a political campaign," Lavrov was quoted by the Interfax news agency as saying.
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