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Swedish envoy in Russian pantyhose probe

A Swedish diplomat has left his post in Moscow after police interrogated him about allegedly selling women's stockings smuggled from Belarus, according to Russian television.

Swedish envoy in Russian pantyhose probe

Citing the foreign ministry and police sources, the NTV television channel on Monday aired footage that it claimed showed a diplomat who works in the Swedish Embassy’s economics section being filmed during a police raid at a shop in southwestern Moscow selling tights.

The blond man was shown recommending some tights to a woman customer, before telling police he had brought the tights from Belarus in his car, which was shown to have diplomatic license plates.

According to the TT news agency, the television segment also includes excerpts of the interview between Russian police and the 35-year-old Swedish diplomat.

Investigator: Where did you get these goods from?

Diplomat: From my car.

Investigator: You mean, from your car with diplomatic plates?

Diplomat: Yes. I realize this is a bad situation

Investigator: This isn’t a ‘bad situation’. It’s called smuggling.

A Russian foreign ministry official, Nikolai Sandros, said in remarks broadcast on NTV that the diplomat had left Moscow.

“The Swedish side has taken a decision to end the work of (the official) at the Swedish Embassy in Moscow and he has already left Russia,” said Sandros, who oversees the ministry’s section for managing foreign diplomats.

A spokesman for the Swedish Embassy in Moscow told AFP he could not comment on the report Monday evening.

Police official Alexei Gnatyuk, head of a section that investigates economic crimes in southwestern Moscow, told NTV that police could not arrest the Swede due to diplomatic immunity and had informed the foreign ministry about the case.

On Tuesday, Sweden’s foreign ministry refused to issue any statement on the diplomat’s less-than-graceful departure from Moscow.

“No comment,” foreign ministry spokesperson Anders Jörle told TT.

“There’s simply nothing to say,” he added.

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RUSSIA

Russia announces no New Year’s greetings for France, US, Germany

US President Joe Biden, France's Emmanuel Macron and German Chancellor Olaf Scholz will not be receiving New Year's greetings from Russian leader Vladimir Putin, the Kremlin said on Friday.

Russia announces no New Year's greetings for France, US, Germany

As the world gears up to ring in the New Year this weekend, Putin sent congratulatory messages to the leaders of Kremlin-friendly countries including Turkey, Syria, Venezuela and China.

But Putin will not wish a happy New Year to the leaders of the United States, France and Germany, countries that have piled unprecedented sanctions on Moscow over Putin’s assault on Ukraine.

“We currently have no contact with them,” Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters.

“And the president will not congratulate them given the unfriendly actions that they are taking on a continuous basis,” he added.

Putin shocked the world by sending troops to pro-Western Ukraine on February 24.

While Kyiv’s Western allies refused to send troops to Ukraine, they have been supplying the ex-Soviet country with weapons in a show of support that has seen Moscow suffer humiliating setbacks on the battlefield.

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