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UK withholds security advice over peerage for oligarch's son

The British government is refusing to reveal whether intelligence agencies expressed concerns about the decision to award a noble title and a seat in Parliament to a businessman whose father was a KGB agent

Via AP news wire
Thursday 12 May 2022 17:16 BST
Britain Politics
Britain Politics

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The British government refused Thursday to reveal whether intelligence agencies expressed concerns about the decision to award a noble title and a seat in Parliament to a newspaper owner whose father was a KGB agent.

Lawmakers voted earlier this year to order the government to release documents related to the appointment of Russia-born newspaper owner Evgeny Lebedev to the House of Lords.

Opposition politicians have demanded to know about Prime Minister Boris Johnson's involvement in the awarding of a place in Parliamentā€™s unelected upper chamber to Lebedev, whose oligarch father Alexander Lebedev is a former KGB officer.

British media have reported that Johnson overruled British intelligence agenciesā€™ concerns about the 2020 ennobling of Lebedev, who owns the Evening Standard and is a shareholder in The Independent. The government insists that all Lords appointments are vetted by a commission.

Two weeks after the deadline to comply with lawmakers' request, Johnson's Conservative government on Thursday published partial documents: the blank form Lebedev was required to fill in for the House of Lords Appointments Commission, the public citation announcing his appointment as Lord Lebedev of Siberia, a list of the other peerages awarded at the same time and a letter congratulating him on the news.

The government said it was withholding other information ā€œto protect national security.ā€

ā€œLord Lebedev is a man of good standing,ā€ Cabinet Office Minister Michael Ellis said. ā€œNo complaint has been made about his personal conduct. He has been vocal in his criticism of the Putin regime.ā€

Ellis said that ā€œwhen considering requests for information from Parliament, the government has a responsibility to consider whether it is in the public interest to place information into the public domain.ā€

He said the government plans to send information relating to ā€œany national security matters arisingā€ to Parliamentā€™s Intelligence and Security Committee, whose meetings and findings are normally kept private.

Angela Rayner, deputy leader of the opposition Labour Party, accused the government of ā€œfailing to comply with a direct instruction from Parliament."

ā€œThis looks like a cover up and smells like a cover up because it is a cover up,ā€ she said.

Johnsonā€™s government has announced moves to clamp down on corruption and money laundering alongside sanctions against Russia over its invasion of Ukraine.

Opposition politicians and anti-corruption campaigners say Johnsonā€™s Conservatives have allowed ill-gotten money to slosh into U.K. properties, banks and businesses for years, turning London into a ā€œlaundromatā€ for dirty cash.

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