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    Your Brexit questions answered: From Dover delays to trade deals

    As Russia goes to war with Ukraine, all things Brexit are still bubbling away over here in the UK.Earlier this week, Britain signed a trade deal with New Zealand, which could damage some UK industries like farming and food processing. And both Keir Starmer and Jacob Rees-Mogg have been heard uttering the phrase ‘Brexit opportunities’ in recent weeks.So, of course, Independent readers have a lot of questions about Brexit.Journalist Adam Forrest hosted an ‘Ask Me Anything’ and here are his answers to eight reader questions.How can the government claim the New Zealand trade deal will boost the UK economy?The deal agreed this week is going to have a very small impact, overall. It’s is expected help the UK economy grow by 0.02 per cent to 0.03 per cent in the long-term, according to the Department for Trade. But government modellers previously said it would be possible for the economy to contract by -0.01 per cent – mainly due industries like farming being undercut by cheap imports from NZ. Either way, the impact certainly won’t feel small to farmers. Agriculture and other food related sectors are forecast to take a £150m hit from the deal.What kind of problems are happening in Dover? Surely it will get worse in July when more checks are put in place?There are signs that long lorry queues at Dover are getting less frequent in recent weeks. But custom experts say extra customs paperwork can still take up to 10 minutes per driver. Hauliers caught in the hold-ups have been forced to “s*** in the bushes” and throw bottles of urine out of the window, union bosses say. The big fear is whether Dover and other ports are ready for further checks coming into force in July – when the physical checks for agri-food products become rigorous. Logistics chiefs who appeared at a select committee this week sounded very unsure whether there would be enough staff to carry out sanitary and phytosanitary (SPS) checks.Looks like the DUP could lose the election in Northern Ireland. Will that throw a spanner in the works when it comes to protocol talks?It’s hard to know what the DUP will do after the election in May. Sinn Fein have been leading in the polls, and the unionist party has refused to confirm whether it would continue from power-sharing at Stormont if there’s a Sinn Fein first minister. Perhaps London and Brussels will simply ignore the mess and keep on talking for much of 2022? Liz Truss has dialled down the Article 16 rhetoric, the EU has made it clear it isn’t interested in deadlines anymore. Trade expert Sam Lowe says one scenario could see the whole thing rumble on indefinitely while “negotiations begin, stall, and begin again”. I’m inclined to think that’ll be the case, at least for the rest of the year.What about the Brexit benefits that Rees-Mogg has been talking about?Rees-Mogg said he’d received 1,800 ideas from “wise” readers of The Sun on how to take advantage of the opportunities of Brexit. I wouldn’t expected 1,800 changes during his war on red tap – there will be relatively few significant changes. As for the 100 benefits the government boasted of earlier this year, it included blue passports and crown stamps on pint. So mostly pointless, symbolic stuff. The government is now looking into bringing back imperial units of measurement. Which wouldn’t only be pointless and symbolic – it’d probably create yet more unnecessary and costly hassle for businesses.What exactly does Jacob Rees-Mogg think he can change when it comes to red tape?The war on red tape means Rees-Mogg will be scratching around for fairly minor regulatory things. Opposition parties fear some relatively important things on data privacy and road safety standards could be changed through “backstage” regulations, so there will be little scrutiny in parliament. Rees-Mogg will have to leave the big trade stuff with the EU to more senior ministers. His recent comments on controls – Rees-Mogg pointed to the unnecessary inspection of tuna shipments from Thailand – suggests he does not quite understand the bureaucracy of border checks.How does Brexit affect the UK’s role in the current events in the Ukraine?Good question. Ukraine’s certainly a reminder for Brexiteers that we are still part of Europe, and our fate is closely bound up with what happens there. Europe (including the UK) has been pretty united over sanctions, all things considered. It’s hard to argue that Britain would be doing anything substantially different right now if it were still in the EU. Boris Johnson’s government is blaming lawyers for the delay in slapping sanction on more oligarchs. But it will be worth watching whether the approach to individual sanctions diverges from the EU as the months go by.How many Ukrainian migrants will the UK offer to receive [compared with the EU]?Boris Johnson bowed to pressure on Tuesday and expanded the visa criteria to allow more Ukrainians to join family members in the UK as they flee the war zone. He claims more 200,000 people could be eligible under the visa route (though it’s only an estimate) after the scheme was broadened. The PM has claimed the UK’s offer to migrants will be “generous”. But it’s certainly not as generous as the EU, which has dropped all visa requirements. The government has cited security concerns for not following suit. Johnson also told MPs today that the EU’s Schengen border-free zone with Ukraine makes it easier for countries in the bloc to accept refugees without paperwork.Why is Keir Starmer talking about Brexit ‘opportunities’?Keir Starmer said in a recent radio interview he wanted take advantage of the “opportunities” of Brexit. Some may have been tempted to think the casual remarks didn’t mean very much. But the words were carefully chosen. He was due to give a speech in recently – cancelled because of the Ukraine crisis – in which he was set to talk about a Labour government teaming up with the private sector to take advantage of Brexit opportunities. Some Remain voters who may come to feel Labour is taking them for granted. But Starmer is hoping that taking the heat out of the issue will make red wall seats in the north and Midlands much easier to win.These questions and answers were part of an ‘Ask Me Anything’ hosted by Adam Forrest at 3pm on Wednesday 2 March. Some of the questions and answers have been edited for this article. You can read the full discussion in the comments section of the original article.Do you have any topics you’d like to see an expert host an ‘Ask Me Anything’ on? Let us know your suggestions in the comments below. More

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    Tory party chairman’s company deletes webpage about Russia ‘elite’ connections

    The luxury business run by the chairman of the Conservative party has deleted a webpage spelling out its Russian “elite” connections.Ben Elliot, founder of luxury concierge service Quintessentially Group, has co-chaired Boris Johnson’s governing party since 2019.This week it emerged that Mr Elliot’s company had deleted a webpage spelling out how the it had catered to the needs of Russia’s wealthy for over a decade.The firm had worked with former Putin advisors, as well as figures like Chelsea football club owner Roman Abramovich, according to The Sunday Times newspaper.”Quintessentially Russia has nearly 15 years’ experience providing luxury lifestyle management services to Russia’s elite and corporate members,” the website explained, spelling out the services available. But following the invasion of Ukraine page is now missing from the firm’s website and offers only a standard “error 404” message. It is still visible by looking at a cached and archived version of the website.The Conservative party has raised over £70m since Mr Elliot took over as chair, in part by targeting the world’s ultra wealthy for contributions.Boris Johnson and his ministers have been pressed in recent days on whether they will give back or pass on donations from people with connections to the Kremlin.Mr Johnson rejected such a suggestion this week, telling MPs in the Commons on Wednesday: “It is absolutely vital, if we are to have a successful outcome in what we are trying to do, collectively united with Ukraine, that we demonstrate that this is not about the Russian people. This is about the Putin regime.” The prime minister has also said: “I do hope that those who have any links with the Putin regime, whatever, any so-called Oligarchs, all those that are in any way associated with the regime, take this opportunity as some brave individuals already have, to disassociate themselves from this barbaric invasion.”The party says all donors “are registered, are legitimate” and suggested Russia-linked donors “support our aims or objectives.”The Independent has approached Quintessentially for comment on this story. More

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    ‘Bee-killing’ pesticide banned by EU to be used in UK

    The UK has given the green light for a “bee-killing” pesticide banned in the EU to be used on a type of crop – sparking criticism from environmental groups. The British government said this was because of the spread of yellows viruses throughout the country and the threat this posed to sugar production. But the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds said it was “sad” to share the news of the move. “Without bees, our farming system will collapse,” it said. Last year, the UK government authorised the emergency use of a neonicotinoid pesticide treatment for sugar beet crops due to the risk from yellows viruses. This would only come into practice when a certain threshold for its use was reached. The Department for Food, Environment and Rural Affairs (Defra) said on Tuesday the conditions had been reached, with modelling predicting a 68 per cent level of virus incidence.It said this meant “the threshold for use has been met and the seed treatment can now proceed under strict conditions”. Evidence suggests neonicotinoids harm brain development and weaken immune systems in bees, and can also leave the animals unable to fly. A wildlife charity said these pesticides can also harm butterflies and other wildlife. Julie Williams, the Butterfly Conservation chief executive, said: “The UK is one of the most nature-depleted countries in the world, and it is simply unacceptable for the government to allow the demonstrable harm of pollinators and other wildlife at a time when nature is already in crisis.”“The time has come for neonicotinoids to be completely banned with no exception,” she said, calling them a group of chemicals “simply too toxic and too damaging to use in any circumstances”. A Defra spokesperson said: “The decision to approve an emergency authorisation was not taken lightly and based on robust scientific assessment. We evaluate the risks very carefully and only grant temporary emergency authorisations for restricted pesticides in special circumstances when strict requirements are met and there are no alternatives.They added: “The threshold for use has now been met according to the independent scientific modelling conducted on the virus spread. Under the terms of this authorisation seed treatment can go ahead with strict controls in place to mitigate risks.” More

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    Labour candidate queried if ‘an uprising’ would help black people more than democracy

    The Labour candidate in this week’s Westminster by-election questioned whether “an uprising” might help black people more than democratic politics.The campaign of Paulette Hamilton – the favourite to win the Birmingham Erdington seat – hit trouble after her comments at a 2015 meeting on the topic “the ballot or the bullet” were unearthed.Ms Hamilton said: “Although I believe in the votes, and I believe in our right to use that vote or destroy that vote, I’m not sure that we will get what we really deserve in this country using the votes.“But I don’t know if we are a strong enough group to get what we want to get if we have an uprising. I think we will be quashed in such a way we could lose a generation of our young people. So I am very torn.”The by-election follows the death, in January, of the veteran Labour MP Jack Dromey who won it at the 2019 general election by just 3,601 votes over the Conservatives.Labour backed its candidate, saying: “Paulette Hamilton is arguing for better representation for the black community in public life and, as she is campaigning to become Birmingham’s first black MP, she has a point.”But the Tory MP Gary Sambrook has demanded she is suspended, arguing her comments are incompatible with Labour’s commitments to tolerance, democracy and respect.“I have written to Keir Starmer this afternoon asking him to suspend Paulette Hamilton due to deeply concerning comments which have this morning come to light,” Mr Sambrook said.The term “uprising” as the description used by many people to describe the disorder in Brixton, south London, in 1981 – which kicked off a summer of riots in British cities.Ms Hamilton is a former nursing boss and is Birmingham City Council’s cabinet member for health and social care.The footage, revealed by the news channel GB News, also showed her criticising two of the city’s existing Labour MPs, Khalid Mahmood and Shabana Mahmood.They are failing to “look after the needs” of the communities they represent, and “have forgotten the reason they were put there in the first place”, Ms Hamilton alleged.“We have large numbers of Muslim councillors, we’ve got two MPs in this city, that look after the needs – well, they don’t, but they are supposed to – look after the needs of a community,” she told the 2015 meeting.“What has happened is, they have got into positions of power, and they have forgotten the reason they were put there in the first place.” More

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    Pressure on Boris Johnson to tighten net on Russian oligarchs’ ‘dirty money’

    Boris Johnson is coming under pressure to tighten the net on illicit Russian finance in “weeks, not years”, as officials confirmed that they are aware of wealthy oligarchs moving cash out of the UK in advance of expected sanctions.Labour has tabled amendments to the government’s Economic Crimes Bill to require the true ownership of properties to be registered within 28 days rather than 18 months.Sir Keir Starmer – who has offered Labour’s help to rush the long-awaited legislation through the Commons in a single day on Monday – told the prime minister that the proposed delay would give cronies of Vladimir Putin plenty of time to “quietly launder their money … into another safe haven”.The bill was first promised in 2016 and included in the Queen’s Speech for passage during this parliamentary year, but as recently as last month Mr Johnson insisted that it would have to wait another year to be introduced.In a letter to the business secretary, Kwasi Kwarteng, Labour’s Jonathan Reynolds said that London’s “deficient” system of corporate registration had made the city “the destination of choice for Russia’s kleptocrats under this government”.Anti-corruption campaigners Transparency International estimate that UK property worth £1.5bn has been bought since 2016 by Russians accused of corruption or links to the Kremlin.“In the spirit of ending malign influence in our economy we hope that the government will support our amendments which seek to strengthen our ability to hit Russian oligarchs as quickly and effectively as possible,” said Mr Reynolds.In the Commons on Wednesday, Mr Johnson promised to publish a list of “Putin’s pals” with proven links to the Russian president, but gave no details of how the list would work or who would feature on it.Aides later said that those named would not necessarily face official sanctions, but that British individuals and companies should “think very carefully” before doing business with them.The move came as Roman Abramovich confirmed he is seeking buyers for Chelsea FC and reports he is also hoping to offload a number of UK properties. There was no official indication that he is under consideration for sanctions or inclusion on Mr Johnson’s list.Meanwhile, UK officials confirmed they are aware of wealthy Russians making efforts to move assets out of the reach of potential asset freezes and travel bans.The UK government undertakes a rigorous programme of checks on each individual before issuing a sanction, in order to ensure that they are watertight if challenged in court. The sanctions team doing this work in Whitehall has trebled in size to about 100 over the last few weeks.Names under consideration are not revealed until the government is ready to “flick the switch” on accounts, but officials acknowledged that this creates a real risk of asset flight.“Rumours circulate and we are made aware of things happening,” said one. “Ministers are interested in increasingly ratcheting up these measures.“We are not giving specific information about targets, [but] people are getting a sense of this agenda and how it is moving incrementally and maybe coming towards them.”The Conservative MP Bob Seely warned that oligarchs’ use of British lawyers and lobbyists to protect their dirty money amounted to “systemic, planned subversion”.Speaking moments after MPs – many of them wearing blue and yellow in a display of solidarity with Ukraine – gave a standing ovation to Vadym Prystaiko, the country’s ambassador in London, Mr Seely told the Commons: “Key oligarchs enforce the Kremlin’s hybrid conflict.“In Britain, one of its aims is to ensure safe passage for money-flows offshore whilst law firms intimidate into silence those who would investigate, be it the media or even the National Crime Agency.”Mr Johnson assured him that law firms themselves would face sanctions if they broke the terms of the UK’s regime of measures.But the chair of the all-party parliamentary group on Russia, Labour’s Chris Bryant, told the PM he felt “ashamed” at the UK’s failure to go further and sanction individuals such as the defence minister, Sergey Shoygu, and Igor Osipov, the commander of the Black Sea fleet.Mr Johnson resisted calls to return donations from wealthy backer Lubov Chernukhin, the wife of a former minister in Putin’s government, after it emerged she gave £80,000 to the Tories in the last few months of 2021.Ms Chernukhin, who holds both Russian and British nationality, has donated more than £2m to Conservative HQ, local Tory parties and Tory MPs over the past eight years, as well as paying to play tennis with Mr Johnson.The Labour MP Bill Esterson urged the PM to give the money to Ukrainian humanitarian causes, telling the Commons that Ms Chernukhin’s husband had received $8m (£6m) from an ally of Putin who was later sanctioned.But Mr Johnson replied: “It is absolutely vital if we are to have a successful outcome in what we are trying to do collectively, united with Ukraine, that we demonstrate that this is not about the Russian people, it is about the Putin regime.”The former US general David Petraeus called for swift action to stop Russian plutocrats spiriting assets away.“Let’s go around and padlock every townhouse owned by an oligarch in Kensington and Mayfair and do it publicly with TV cameras rolling,” Gen Petraeus told Channel 4 News. “Let’s take away every soccer team.” More

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    Signs of wealthy Russians shifting money out of UK to avoid possible sanctions

    UK officials are aware of wealthy Russians shifting their money to protect themselves against the threat of sanctions, it has emerged.Boris Johnson has faced criticism over the slow pace of implementation of UK sanctions, with fewer than a dozen oligarchs subjected to asset freezes and travel bans in the wake of the Ukraine invasion.Reports have suggested that Roman Abramovich may be trying to sell Chelsea football club as well as properties in the UK to guard against future action by the government, even though there has been no official indication that he is being considered for sanctions.Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer today blasted the 18-month delay envisaged before the introduction of key measures to clamp down on illicit finance, telling Mr Johnson it would “give Putin’s cronies 18 months to quietly launder their money out of the UK property market and into another safe haven”.The UK government undertakes a rigorous programme of checks on each individual before issuing a sanction, in order to ensure that they are watertight if challenged in court. The sanctions team doing this work in Whitehall has trebled in size to around 100 over the last few weeks.And UK officials today confirmed that they have been approached by law firms who must apply for permission to represent sanctioned individuals.The small band of super-wealthy Russian oligarchs around Putin are notorious for deploying teams of expensive lawyers and lobbyists to fight any threat to their fortunes.But one British official said: “We are very confident that everything we have done will withstand whatever legal scrutiny anyone chooses to throw at it.”Officials acknowledged there was a “real risk” of asset flight as soon as an individual suspects that they may be at risk of being targeted for sanctions, which can prevent any UK business or individual from transacting any business with them.In a bid to prevent money being shifted out of the UK ahead of sanctions being applied, there is a strict rule of secrecy about the names under consideration, and officials are ready to “flick the switch” to shut down accounts the instant that measures are announced.However, officials said it was clear that potential targets were taking action to protect their assets.“Rumours circulate and we are made aware of things happening,” said one. “It is not about us getting ahead of things and revealing particular targets.“It is just this world we are in, where ministers are interested in increasingly ratcheting up these measures. People are just catching on that it may be coming their way.“We are not giving specific information about targets. People are getting a sense of this agenda and how it is moving incrementally and maybe coming towards them.”Officials refused to discuss the possibility of Mr Abramovich facing sanctions.But it is understood that if measures were to be taken against him, Chelsea might have to apply for special permission to continue playing.Under the UK’s sanctions regime, it is possible for businesses linked to a “designated person” to apply to the Treasury for a licence allowing them to function under exceptional circumstances.Civil servants would determine whether it was appropriate to apply a “derogation” for humanitarian reasons or in order to meet the business needs of individuals and companies.UK officials said there was clear evidence that the international sanctions imposed since the invasion began last Thursday had delivered an “immediate economic shock”.“(We’ve seen) the doubling of interest rates, the 250 billion off the stock market, the fact that the stock market hasn’t even opened for the last for few days, Sberbank pulling out of the European market,” said one official.“There has clearly been a pretty significant economic shock and confidence in the Russian economy has completely plummeted as a result of the measures that have been taken.”The official accepted that Putin had “priced in” the cost of some sanctions, the impact of which in many cases could be passed on to ordinary Russians.But the involvement of countries like Japan, Singapore and South Korea, along with the sheer scale of the international response, meant the impact was “much greater” than anything the Kremlin can have anticipated.“The ratchet will turn and the screw will tighten and that impact will play out over time in a way that will that will constrain Russia’s military development and cause them lasting economic damage,” said the official.“That will, I think, start to have a real impact, whether (or not) on Putin’s calculus, certainly on the calculus of those around him.” More

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    Boris Johnson news – live: PM to publish ‘Putin’s pals’ names but refuses to give up Russian banker donation

    Boris Johnson asked to explain why crackdown on Russian ‘dirty money’ will take 18 monthsBoris Johnson has committed to releasing a full list of people and organisations linked to Russian president Vladimir Putin’s regime, with Downing Street warning Britons they should “think carefully” before dealing with them.There were no immediate details of who will feature on the list of “Putin’s pals”, but aides indicated that it will extend well beyond the eight oligarchs and 100-plus companies already sanctioned by the UK in the wake of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.Mr Johnson announced the latest stand against Moscow during PMQs on Wednesday, in a session that also saw him refuse a call by Labour MP Bill Esterson to donate £2m given to the Tories by a Russian banker to Ukraine humanitarian causes.The PM was asked by Mr Esterson whether he would hand over the money – given to the Conservatives by Lubov Chernukhin, the wife of a former minister in President Putin’s government, as recently as the end of 2021 – but Mr Johnson appeared to reject the call. Instead, he told MPs the UK’s fight with Mr Putin was “not about the Russian people”.Show latest update

    1646241311Watch: PM explicitly accuses Russia of committing ‘war crimes’Boris Johnson believes use of munitions on civilians in Ukraine ‘fully qualifies as a war crime’Sam Hancock2 March 2022 17:151646240111EU travel rules explain more generous help for Ukraine refugees – PMBoris Johnson is under fire after claiming EU travel rules explain its far more generous offer to refugees from Ukraine, as criticism grows over the UK’s stance.Under pressure in the Commons, the PM said the “Schengen border-free zone” – allowing passport-free travel – explained why the EU is waiving visas for people fleeing the Russian invasion, reports our deputy political editor Rob Merrick. In fact, although an association agreement does allow Ukrainians to enter the EU without a visa, that’s is only for 90 days and the rules will be tightened by the end of the year.Sam Hancock2 March 2022 16:551646238911PM accuses Putin of committing war crimesBoris Johnson has officially accused Vladimir Putin of committing war crimes over his invasion of Ukraine.The PM accused the Russian president of “abhorrent” attacks as Ukraine’s capital Kyiv braced for a siege and second city Kharkiv suffered a further pounding.And after Mr Johnson spoke to Ukraine’s president Volodymyr Zelensky on Wednesday morning, promising further support and weapons for the forces resisting Russia’s military, the UK for the first time explicitly accused Mr Putin of war crimes.At PMQs, Mr Johnson told MPs: “What we have seen already from Vladimir Putin’s regime in the use of the munitions that they have already been dropping on innocent civilians, in my view, already fully qualifies as a war crime.”He also promised to publish a list of people associated with Mr Putin who could be liable for sanctions.More than 2,000 civilians have died since the invasion, Ukraine’s state emergency service has said, although that figure has not been independently verified.Meanwhile, the United Nations’ refugee agency believes around 874,000 people have fled Ukraine but that figure is soon expected to reach a million.Sam Hancock2 March 2022 16:351646237476Children’s minister ‘wouldn’t be happy’ if his daughters boarded with trans pupilA government minister said he “probably wouldn’t be overly happy” if his daughters were placed in a boarding house with a transgender girl.In an inquiry from the Commons’ education select committee, Will Quince, the minister for children and families, was asked by Conservative MP Caroline Johnson about the rising number of transgender students in UK schools. She added that she had been contacted by parents who were concerned about an 18-year-old trans girl sharing a boarding house with their teenage daughters.He responded by saying the issue was a “bit of a minefield” and that the DfE and Government Equalities Office are working together to provide guidance for schools, writes Furvah Shah.Sam Hancock2 March 2022 16:111646236845Watch the full exchange: Starmer accuses PM of dragging heels on Russian ‘dirty money’ The full exchange: Starmer accuses Johnson of dragging heels on Russian ‘dirty money’Sam Hancock2 March 2022 16:001646235797Sturgeon says ‘no link’ between Ukraine and Scottish independenceOver to Scotland. SNP leader Nicola Sturgeon has insisted there is “no connection” between the war in Ukraine and the campaign for Scottish independence, after a top party official was condemned for appearing to make “crass” comparison between the two.Mike Russell, the SNP’s president, was criticised by opposition parties after he used a newspaper column to liken Ukraine potentially being ruled by Russia to Scotland being part of the UK, writes Adam Forrest.Mr Russell’s comments were branded “crass” by Scottish Liberal Democrat MSP Willie Rennie, who said he was astounded a senior SNP figure “would seek to draw any parallels to the democratic decision of the people of Scotland”.Sam Hancock2 March 2022 15:431646234868Watch: Labour MP refuses to back open door policy for Ukraine refugeesLabour MP Preet Kaur Gill refuses to back open door policy for Ukrainian refugeesSam Hancock2 March 2022 15:271646234829Johnson prepares to publish list of ‘Putin’s pals’Boris Johnson has promised to publish a full list of people and organisations associated with Russian president Vladimir Putin’s regime, with Downing Street saying Britons should “think carefully” before dealing with them.There were no immediate details of who will feature on the list of “Putin’s pals”, but Downing Street indicated that it will extend well beyond the eight oligarchs and 100-plus companies already sanctioned by the UK in the wake of the invasion of Ukraine.Mr Johnson’s official spokesperson said that sanctions will not necessarily be applied to all those featuring, whose names would be published “in the interest of transparency”, writes our political editor Andrew Woodcock. Sam Hancock2 March 2022 15:271646234449Give Russian-linked donations to Ukrainian charities, Labour MP tells Boris JohnsonThe Conservative Party should give money from a Conservative donor with Russian links to Ukrainian humanitarian causes, the prime minister has been told.Lubov Chernukhin, whose husband Vladimir Chernukhin served as Russian president Vladimir Putin’s deputy finance minister before moving to the UK in 2004, has given more than £2 million to the Conservative Party since 2016.Figures released by the Electoral Commission today show Ms Chernukhin donated another £80,250 to the party in the final months of 2021.At PMQs earlier this afternoon, Labour MP Bill Esterson asked the PM if he would instruct the Conservative Party to hand the money to Ukrainian humanitarian causes.Boris Johnson replied: “It is absolutely vital that if we are to have a successful outcome in what we are trying to do collectively, united with Ukraine, that we demonstrate that this is not about the Russian people, it is about the Putin regime.”Chiara Giordano2 March 2022 15:201646233549People should ‘think very carefully’ about associating themselves with those named on Putin listBusinesses and individuals should “think very carefully” about associating themselves with people who the UK government is preparing to name as having associations with Vladimir Putin, according to Downing Street.The prime minister’s official spokesman, asked whether the list would serve as a warning not to do business with those who feature, said: “It may well have that effect.”He added: “I think what we are trying to do across the board, whether it is with businesses or oligarchs or in the cultural sector as well, is to make clear that, even where we are not taking legislative action, people should think very carefully about how they engage with any organisations that may be assisting Putin – even inadvertently – in the attack and invasion of Ukraine.”Chiara Giordano2 March 2022 15:05 More

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    Boris Johnson claims EU travel rules explain its more generous help for refugees from Ukraine

    Boris Johnson is under fire after claiming EU travel rules explain its far more generous offer to refugees from Ukraine, as criticism grows over the UK’s stance.Under pressure in the Commons, the prime minister said the “Schengen border-free zone” – allowing passport-free travel – explained why the EU is waiving visas for people fleeing the Russian invasion.In fact, although an association agreement does allow Ukrainians to enter the EU without a visa, that’s is only for 90 days and the rules will be tightened by the end of the year.The EU has gone much further by allowing refugees to remain for up to three years, as up to 7 million are expected to escape Vladimir Putin’s increasingly violent assault.Furthermore, Ireland has dropped its requirement for Ukrainians to have a visa – despite not being a Schengen member – saying refugees must seek permission to stay after their arrival.Paul Blomfield, a Labour MP, accused Mr Johnson of “making it up to get out of a corner again”, after he was put on the spot about the plight of ordinary Ukrainians.At prime minister’s questions, Mr Johnson also claimed the UK has welcomed more refugees than anywhere else in Europe – despite Germany allowing in one million, after the 2015 crisis.“I think we have settled 25,000 vulnerable people since 2015, which is more than any other European country, so we should be proud of our record,” MPs were told.The Independent has set up a petition calling on the UK government to be at the forefront of the international community offering aid and support to those in Ukraine. To sign the petition click here.The UK government is continuing to resist a refugee programme, arguing waiving standard visa rules and biometric checks would put UK lives at risk from Putin’s agents.It has given ground on family reunions, so more relatives of Ukrainians in the UK – parents of adults, grandparents, adult offspring and siblings – will be eligible, instead of just spouses and children.And individuals, charities, businesses and community groups will be able to sponsor Ukrainians to work in the UK, outside of normal rules on salaries and language spoken.The Independent is also raising money for the people of Ukraine – if you would like to donate then please click here for our GoFundMe page.The Home Office has claimed up to 200,000 Ukrainians are now eligible to come to the UK as family members, but has not explained how the figure has been reached.A French government adviser has protested that UK visa rules have left Ukrainian refugees who want to travel on to the UK being stranded in northern France.“We have drawn the attention of the British authorities to the difficulties associated with the lack of information and the over-restrictive nature of this system,” the adviser told Le Parisien newspaper on Tuesday.In the Commons, the SNP Westminster leader Ian Blackford told Mr Johnson: “This is a moment for Europe to stand united in the face of Putin’s war.“The EU have acted and waived all visa requirements for Ukrainian refugees, the UK government stands alone in our continent in so far refusing to do the same.” More