The European Parliament has restricted the Russian ambassador's access to the assembly, requiring him to request a pass every time he wants to attend sessions, in a jab at Moscow for banning 89 EU politicians from entering Russia.
The EU parliament was “restricting free access” to Russia's EU Ambassador Vladimir Chizhov and another unidentified diplomat, while visit requests from members of the two chambers of Russia's parliament, the State Duma and the Federation Council, would be judged on “case by case basis,” European Parliament President Martin Schulz said Tuesday, according to a statement released by his office.
The restriction means that the Russian ambassador will still be able to come to the EU parliament, “but he would need to request a pass for each visit,” a spokesperson for the legislature was quoted as saying by TASS.
Russia's Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov said his government's blacklist of 89 EU officials was a “legitimate, appropriate measure [in response] to the unacceptable restrictions on entering the EU, made under far-fetched pretexts for Russian representatives,” TASS reported. The EU has imposed sanctions, including asset freezes and travel bans, on Russian officials who were deemed to have played key parts in the annexation of Crimea from Ukraine or Moscow's support for separatists in Eastern Ukraine.
Meanwhile, Ryabkov charged, EU's “retaliatory measures for our retaliatory measures are simply a reflection of intellectual political mediocrity,” he was quoted by TASS as saying.
“I think one can generally skip going there, to that assembly. There is nothing to do there, with or without those restrictions,” he said, TASS reported.
Ryabkov's subordinates have been less reserved in their comments about the situation. A deputy chief of the Foreign Ministry's public information office, Maria Zakharova, wrote on her Facebook page that “Eurobureaucracy occasionally returns to the times of the Holy Inquisition.”
“A hunt for Russian witches has been declared,” she posted.
The Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe, or PACE, had previously suspended the Russian delegation's voting rights over Russia's role in the Ukraine crisis.
The move — or the Russian delegation's apparent forgetfulness about it — prompted a round of laughter at a PACE session earlier this year, when Moscow's envoy discovered that his voting terminal did not work.
“I'm far from thinking that it was done intentionally,” the diplomat said, complaining about what he said seemed to be a malfunction, only to be informed that “the Russian delegation has no right to vote.” The assembly responded with a round of laughter and applause.
The EU parliament's Shultz told the Russian ambassador Tuesday the latest restriction on access was imposed after “the Russian authorities have failed to ensure transparency in their decisions, in line with international law and legal obligations,” according to a statement released by the European assembly.
The parliament was also suspending its engagement with the EU-Russia Parliamentary Cooperation Committee, the statement said.
by via The Moscow Times News
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