European politicians 'proud' to be on Russian blacklist

European politicians who discovered they were on a Russian travel blacklist said Saturday they were proud of being included and would continue speaking out against Russia`s policy towards Ukraine.

Stockholm: European politicians who discovered they were on a previously confidential Russian travel blacklist said Saturday they were proud of being included, as EU governments led by Germany criticized the entry bans.

The 89-strong list, formerly undisclosed but revealed to European diplomats on Thursday, includes past and serving parliamentarians and ministers who have been outspoken critics of President Vladimir Putin and the war in Ukraine.

"Being on this list does not change my commitment to the people of Ukraine," said Swedish MEP Anna Maria Corazza Bildt in a tweet.

"I have more to be proud of than to be afraid of!... Putin`s list is a confirmation that I am doing right as a parliamentarian," the centre-right politician, married to Sweden`s former foreign minister Carl Bildt, added. 

She was among eight Swedes confirmed on the list, which was drawn up in response to the EU`s own sanctions and travel bans on Russia citizens over Moscow`s annexation of Crimea in Ukraine last year.

Former Czech foreign minister Karel Schwarzenberg, a staunch critic of Russia`s policy towards Ukraine, also confirmed he was on the list and welcomed it. 

"When I saw the other names (on the list), I found out I was in a very decent club. I consider this a reward," he was quoted as saying by news agency CTK.

Other names have since been made public including Guy Verhofstadt, head of the Liberal group in the European Parliament and a former Belgian PM, and Sweden`s former centre-right culture minister Lena Adelsohn Liljeroth. 
According to German daily Bild seven German nationals have been targeted including Michael Fuchs, vice-president of the national parliament`s conservative CDU-CSU group and former MEP Daniel Cohn-Bendit.

The German government complained Saturday about the secrecy surrounding the measures and said it expected Russia to publish the list along with an explanation of how to contest it legally.

"At a time when we are trying to defuse a bitter and dangerous conflict in the heart of Europe, this does not help," German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier said in a statement during a visit to Ukraine. 

Polish media reports suggest that as many as 18 Poles have been targeted, including Deputy Minister of National Defence Robert Kupiecki and the Senate Speaker Bogdan Borusewicz.

Borusewicz is a key communist-era dissident who was denied entry to Russia in March to attend the funeral of outspoken opposition activist Boris Nemtsov who was shot dead in central Moscow.

Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte was the first to reveal that a list of blacklisted figures had been shared with European diplomats.

He said Friday that he would let "Moscow know... in no uncertain terms" that the Netherlands rejected it as the bans were "not based on international law".

Western governments have known about the existence of a list for some time and several prominent politicians and officials have been stopped from entering Russia in recent months. 

"It is very striking behaviour which unfortunately does not improve Russia`s image and we have asked for a clarification for this conduct," Swedish Foreign Minister Margot Wallstroem told news agency TT on Friday.

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