Russian Ambassador lashes out at the Netherlands
International relations The Russian ambassador to the Netherlands has been very critical of the relationship with the Netherlands in front of Russian media. According to him, members of parliament are led by "fake news and mendacious reporting".
Eva Cukier - 2 November 2021 at 17:41
Aleksandr Shulgin, the Russian ambassador in the Netherlands - Photo by Phil Nijhuis
Russia's ambassador to the Netherlands, Aleksandr Shulgin, delivered a harsh verdict on Dutch-Russian relations on Tuesday. In an online press conference organized by Rossiya Segodnia news agency, Shulgin spent an hour on Tuesday answering previously submitted questions from Russian journalists on numerous diplomatically sensitive issues between Russia and the West.
Shulgin, ambassador to The Hague since 2015, assessed relations between the Netherlands and Russia as "far from good." He also denounced the "mainly negative publications" on Russia in the Dutch media, which he said would focus too much on negative issues such as hacking, spying, Russian interference, and other "accusations."
He also denounced the "one-sided" investigation into the MH17 crash and complained that Russian evidence is being ignored by investigators. It was also announced on Tuesday that the prosecution's penalty verdict against three Russian and one Ukrainian suspect in the MH17 criminal case, previously scheduled for this month, is not expected until February.
According to Shulgin, Russia is willing to improve relations, but the Netherlands must work just as hard to do so. According to the ambassador, Dutch parliamentarians are too much led by "fake news and mendacious reporting" about Russia. Incidentally, Shulgin's criticism does not concern Dutch citizens. He does not find any Russophobia in Dutch society, and he finds the Dutch "friendly, open and eager to work."
Crimean Treasures
According to Shulgin, relations between the Netherlands and Russia deteriorated well before 2014, the year flight MH17 was downed. He blamed the Dutch government for a double agenda towards Russia. "The Netherlands wants to show Russia two hands. One opened, with an offer of cooperation. The other as a fist, with which it threatens Russia and wants to show that [the Netherlands] does not want business as usual," Shulgin said by video link from the Russian embassy in The Hague.
He additionally addressed the legal case surrounding the so-called Crimean Treasures, a collection of precious objects from Crimea - annexed by Russia in 2014 - to which both Ukraine and Russia have a claim. The Amsterdam Court of Appeals ruled last week that the treasures must be returned to Ukraine.
Poison attacks
The Russian ambassador, who in addition is permanent representative to the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) in The Hague, spoke at length about Russia's position within the international organization. The OPCW is investigating the use of the chemical weapon novichok against former double agent Sergei Skripal and his daughter, in 2018 in Salisbury, UK. In the same year, the Netherlands foiled a Russian hacking attack targeting the OPCW.
The organization is also concerned with the attack on opposition leader Aleksey Navalny, who is imprisoned in Russia after he was also poisoned with novichok in 2020. Shulgin complained that Russia was not heard within the organization and stressed that it will not tolerate any restriction of its voting rights or other punitive measures. He added that Russia will take "appropriate" measures, but would not comment on the nature of those measures.
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