Russia's bloody 'Butcher of Mariupol' and a host of Kremlin television executives have been added to Britain's sanctions list.
Colonel-General Mikhail Mizintsev, who ordered a strike on a theatre
that killed 300 civilians, is among 14 people and organisations hit in
the latest wave of punitive economic measures unveiled by Foreign
Secretary Liz Truss.
The latest names added to the sanctions list include propagandist Sergey
Brilev and Kremlin-funded TV-Novosti, which owns the RT news channel.
Aleksandr Zharov, chief executive of Gazprom-Media, Alexey Nikolov the
managing director of RT, and Anton Anisimov, the head of Sputnik
International Broadcasting were also sanctioned.
Foreign Secretary Liz Truss said: 'Putin's war on Ukraine is based on a
torrent of lies. Britain has helped lead the world in exposing Kremlin
disinformation, and this latest batch of sanctions hits the shameless
propagandists who push out Putin's fake news and narratives.
'We will keep on going with more sanctions to ramp up the pressure on
Russia and ensure Putin loses in Ukraine. Nothing and no one is off the
table.'
Mizintsev is facing demands for a war crimes prosecution over the attack on the theatre which killed 300.
Video released at the weekend showed injured civilians at the Donetsk Regional Drama Theatre after it was near-totally destroyed by Russian bombs aimed at building on March 16 despite a large inscription saying 'children' being clearly visible on the pavement outside.
In a chilling intercepted phone call he also appeared to berate a junior
officer for not cutting off the ears of a private who had been caught
not wearing his uniform properly.
Olexander Scherba, Ukraine's ex-Austrian ambassador, this week branded
Mizintsev the 'Butcher of Mariupol' while Oleksandra Matviichuk, head of
Ukraine's Centre for Civil Liberties, called on him to face war
charges.
A Foreign Office source said: 'Liz wants to keep on hitting Putin with
sanctions to debilitate the Russian war economy and put Ukraine in the
strongest possible negotiating position. There'll be plenty more
sanctions to come.'
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