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US should raise direct questions instead of “playing lists” – Lavrov

"If our partners have questions, we’ll be very glad to answer them and we’ll be ready to discuss them"

MOSCOW, October 26 (Itar-Tass) — The U.S. should raise questions directly and “not ‘play lists’” with Russia, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said.

Lavrov commented on a statement by Speaker of the U.S. House Of Representatives John Boehner saying in the Twitter blog that Russia would be included in a list of the countries that arouse the U.S. concern.

“I didn’t hear such news. I see that Twitter chat is very attractive. But I believe that it is necessary to use other formats to put forth official, serious proposals,” the Russian minister said.

“If our partners have questions, we’ll be very glad to answer them and we’ll be ready to discuss them. For this there are channels between Moscow and Washington – contacts between the executive bodies of power and between the parliaments.” “There is the Committee on Foreign Affairs in the House of Representatives. Its head avoids contacts within the committees on foreign affairs of the State Duma and the House of Representative,” Lavrov stressed.

“We are concerned over the actions that are taken in the United States.” “We are trying to raise questions directly and not to play ‘lists’ as Washington has done recently. For instance, we raised direct questions related to the situation in Libya and the actions that the North Atlantic Alliance took,” he said.

“Primarily, we stress the need to prevent all violations of international law and all violations of the U.N. Charter,” Lavrov noted.

The U.S. State Department has put Russian officials connected to the death of lawyer Sergei Magnitsky on a visa blacklist as Moscow threatens to curtail cooperation on Iran, North Korea, Libya and the transit of supsupplies for Afghanistan if the Senate passes a measure imposing even tougher sanctions for human rights abuses.

The Russian government has grown ever more infuriated by a series of international reprimands over the case of the 37-year-old lawyer who died a painful death in pre-trial detention, and it has complained that other countries are interfering in its domestic affairs.

The European Parliament, Canada and the Netherlands are moving toward their own visa bans for a list of 60 Russians involved in the case. The United States, however, is the first to have an active blacklist for the Russians, although senior U.S. officials say it has fewer than 60 names.

In comments on the Senate bill issued last week, the Obama administration revealed the threats of retaliation as well as, for the first time, its visa blacklist. “Secretary [Hillary Rodham] Clinton has taken steps to ban individuals associated with the wrongful death of Sergei Magnitsky from travelling to the United States,” the document said.

“Senior Russian government officials have warned us that they will respond asymmetrically if this [Senate] legislation passes,” the document said. “Their argument is that we cannot expect them to be our partner in supporting sanctions against countries like Iran, North Korea, and Libya, and sanction them at the same time. Russian officials have said that other areas of bilateral cooperation, including on transit to Afghanistan, could be jeopardized if this legislation passes.”

The Russian Foreign Ministry said it would respond to questions on the issue but perhaps not until later in the week.

Despite possible threats to what the Obama administration calls the “reset” in U.S.-Russia relations and the implications for U.S. interests, supporters of the Senate proposal that has provoked the threats of retaliation say it is the right thing to do.

“The reset has brought about improvement in relations,” said David Kramer, executive director of Freedom House and a former State Department official, “but at the end of the day we’re still dealing with the same Russia, which shows no respect for human rights, no accountability and no respect for rule of law.”

A reset policy can only do so much, and a United States that is talking about human rights in the Middle East cannot look the other way for Russia, he said.

Magnitsky was working for an American law firm in Moscow and advising Hermitage Capital, the large Western investment company run by William Browder, when he accused police and tax officials of a 230 million U.S. dollar tax fraud. He was quickly arrested and himself charged with the crime.

In May, Sens. Benjamin L. Cardin (D-Md.) and John McCain (R-Ariz.) introduced the Sergei Magnitsky Rule of Law Accountability Act, which listed the names of officials involved in the Magnitsky case. Though named for Magnitsky, it would apply to other extreme future and past cases, such as the unsolved murder of journalist Anna Politkovskaya. It would freeze assets as well as visas.

Advocates of the bill suggested that Russia permits the transportation of supplies through its territory to Afghanistan and supports U.S. policies because it’s in the country’s interest, not out of altruism.