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Australia rules out new sanctions against Russia

CANBERRA — Australia’s Prime Minister Tony Abbott said today (July 30) he is not considering ratcheting up sanctions against Russia while his government is focused on retrieving Australian victims from the wreckage of the Malaysian airliner disaster in Ukraine.

Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott delivers his keynote speech during the B20 Summit in Sydney, on July 17, 2014. Photo: Reuters

Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott delivers his keynote speech during the B20 Summit in Sydney, on July 17, 2014. Photo: Reuters

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CANBERRA — Australia’s Prime Minister Tony Abbott said today (July 30) he is not considering ratcheting up sanctions against Russia while his government is focused on retrieving Australian victims from the wreckage of the Malaysian airliner disaster in Ukraine.

Mr Abbott has had several telephone conversations with Russian President Vladimir Putin in the past two weeks and has credited Mr Putin with cooperating with international efforts to retrieve the remains of 298 people killed when Malaysia Airlines Flight 17 was shot down by a surface-to-air missile, likely fired by pro-Russian rebels who then controlled the crash site.

Mr Abbott said he was not considering following the United States and European Union by increasing sanctions aimed at pressuring Mr Putin into ending his country’s support for separatists in east Ukraine.

“We already have some sanctions on Russia. I’m not saying that we might not at some point in the future move further. But at the moment, our focus is not on sanctions; our focus is on bringing home our dead as quickly as we humanly can,” Mr Abbott told reporters.

Australia lost 28 citizens in the July 17 disaster and sponsored a United Nations Security Council Resolution which passed, with Russian support. The resolution demands the separatists allow the dead to be retrieved and international investigators free access to the crash site.

But a resurgence in fighting between the separatists and Ukraine troops in recent days has prevented Dutch and Australian police from searching the site for human remains and evidence.

Spurred to action by the downing of the airliner, the European Union approved dramatically tougher economic sanctions yesterday against Russia, including an arms embargo and restrictions on state-owned banks. President Barack Obama followed with an expansion of US penalties targeting key sectors of the Russian economy.

Mr Obama and US allies also warned that Russia was building up troops and weaponry along its border with Ukraine.

Australia introduced financial sanctions and travel bans on June 19 targeting 50 people and 11 entities complicit in the Russian threat to Ukraine sovereignty. AP

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