Russia bans entry to five UK nationals including Washington Post journalist


June 3 (Reuters) - Russia ⁠has banned five British nationals, including The Washington ⁠Post journalist Catherine Belton and The i ‌Paper correspondent Richard Holmes, from entering the country, the foreign ministry said on its website late on Tuesday.

Belton is an investigative ​correspondent focusing on Russia and previously ⁠reported about the country ⁠for the Financial Times and Reuters among other media.

Holmes, ⁠an ‌award-winning investigative journalist and a Pulitzer Prize finalist, is a security correspondent at Britain's ⁠The i Paper.

The foreign ministry said the entry ​ban was ‌an answer to the "provocative anti-Russian rhetoric of British ⁠officials, the ​spread of insinuations about Russia, and London's practical steps to supply the Kyiv regime with weapons".

Other Britons named ⁠under the ban were Alexander Browder, ​a contributor for the Henry Jackson Society policy think tank; Alice Laugher, chief executive of humanitarian staffing firm ⁠Committed to Good; and Richard Westbury, chairman of the Chelsea Group, parent company of Committed to Good.

The UK is among countries which imposed sanctions on Russia, ​including travel bans, after Moscow's annexation ⁠of Crimea from Ukraine in 2014. Those measures expanded ​following Russia's full-scale invasion in ‌2022. Moscow has also imposed ​sanctions, including travel bans, in retaliation.

(Reporting by Jekaterīna Golubkova in Tokyo; Editing by Cynthia Osterman)

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