In first such case, Russia's ex-proxy in Crimea convicted of breaching UK sanctions
A London court found the 48-year-old guilty of circumventing sanctions between February 2023 and January 2024 on six out of seven counts.
Ovsiannikov has been accused of opening a Halifax Bank of Scotland (HBOS) account on or before February 2023 and having his wife, Ekaterina Ovsiannikova, transfer tens of thousands of pounds to it.
His brother, Alexei Owsjanikow, was convicted of two counts of sanctions breach.
Ovsiannikov was appointed as chief of the occupation administration in Sevastopol in 2017, the same year he was placed on the U.K. and EU sanctions lists. He held the post until 2019, when he resigned amid criticism of his work.
The Russian official, who also previously served as a deputy trade minister before being dismissed and expelled from the ruling United Russia party in 2020, moved to London in 2023 and acquired a British passport despite existing sanctions.
This marks the first prosecution case based on the U.K.'s Russian Regulations of 2019, the Guardian reported.
The U.K. imposed targeted sanctions on Russia in coordination with other partners in 2014 in response to Moscow's illegal annexation of Crimea, further tightening the sanctions regime after the outbreak of the full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022.
Over 1,700 individuals and 380 entities are sanctioned under the U.K.'s Russia regime as of 2025.
Read also: 'Supporting Ukraine is America first' — Trump's spiritual advisor, Pastor Mark Burns
We've been working hard to bring you independent, locally-sourced news from Ukraine. Consider supporting the Kyiv Independent.
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San Francisco Chronicle
an hour ago
- San Francisco Chronicle
'Outback Killer' Bradley John Murdoch dies at 67, leaving mystery of Peter Falconio's body unsolved
MELBOURNE, Australia (AP) — Bradley John Murdoch, known as the 'Outback Killer' and convicted of murdering British backpacker Peter Falconio who vanished in arid central Australia 24 years ago, has died, authorities said Wednesday. He was 67. Murdoch died on Tuesday night in the palliative care unit of the Alice Springs Hospital, according to a statement from the Northern Territory Department of Corrections. He was diagnosed with terminal throat cancer in 2019 and was recently transferred to the hospital from the Alice Springs prison. His death leaves the mystery of the whereabouts of Falconio's body unsolved. The territory's police did not immediately respond to queries from The Associated Press whether Murdoch had provided any clues before he died. The 2005 conviction In 2005, Murdoch was convicted in the territory's Supreme Court in Darwin of the 2001 murder of 28-year-old Falconio, from Huddersfield, Yorkshire, and the attempted kidnapping of Falconio's girlfriend Joanne Lees, then 27. The crime captured global attention and was one of the inspirations for the 2005 Australian horror movie 'Wolf Creek,' about a serial killer who preyed on backpackers and left a single witness who became a suspect. Lees, who wrote about her ordeal in her 2006 memoir 'No Turning Back,' complained that police treated her as a suspect in the years before Murdoch was charged. A court order prevented the movie's release in the Northern Territory during Murdoch's trial, fearing it could influence jurors. Murdoch, who was arrested in 2003 in the case, was not accused of any other killings. Maintaining his innocence Murdoch consistently maintained his innocence and did not help authorities search for Falconio's remains. At the time of the killing, Murdoch was an interstate drug runner, using amphetamines to stay awake for dayslong drives and cannabis to sleep. On the night of July 14, 2001, he tricked Falconio and Lees into stopping their campervan on a dark and remote highway north of Alice Springs. Lees watched her boyfriend leave the van to inspect a supposedly sparking exhaust pipe. She testified that she heard a gun shot and never saw her boyfriend again. Murdoch, an imposing 193 centimeters (6 foot, 4 inches) in height, bound her wrists with cable ties before she managed to escape and hid in the desert scrub for hours. She testified that she watched Murdoch searching for her with a flashlight and his dog. Lees later waved down a truck and raised the alarm. Police doubled the reward for information Last month, police doubled the reward for information leading to the location of Falconio's remains to 500,000 Australian dollars ($330,000), following news that Murdoch was in palliative care. 'Police still hold out hope that someone may be able to provide some vital information to assist in this search,' Police Commander Mark Grieve said. He added that over the years he spent in prison, Murdoch had not revealed the whereabouts of his victim's remains. Colleen Gwynne, a former police officer who led the investigation at the time of Falconio's disappearance, said Murdoch might have panicked after Lees escaped and in his confusion forgot what he did with the body. A sentence to life in prison 'Once that panic set in … he may have disposed of a body somewhere he's not entirely certain where that is,' Gwynne told 10 Network News television earlier this month. In 2005, Murdoch was sentenced to life in prison for Falconio's murder and was ordered to serve at least 28 years before he could be considered for parole. He was also sentenced to six years, to be served concurrently, for assaulting Lees. The earliest he could have applied for parole would have been 2032, but without providing information as to what he had done with Falconio's body, Murdoch was not likely to have been released. The territory passed laws in 2016 preventing prisoners convicted of murder from qualifying for parole unless they provide police with the location of their victims' bodies. Murdoch was born in the west coast town of Geraldton, the third child of an automobile mechanic and his wife, a hairdresser. As a teen, he became involved in biker gang crime and was first sentenced to prison in 1995 for shooting at a group of Indigenous people at Fitzroy Crossing in Western Australia. He served 15 months of a 21-month sentence. In sentencing Murdoch for Falconio's killing, Chief Justice Brian Martin said he doubted any words could express the trauma and terror Lees had suffered. 'It must have been close to the worst nightmare imaginable,' the judge said.


New York Post
an hour ago
- New York Post
Family of Ukrainian teen, 14, injured in deadly Russian strike begs Trump to help them live ‘under a peaceful sky'
KYIV — A Ukrainian mother and her 14-year-old daughter were wounded in a brutal Russian drone strike the same day President Trump pledged more weapons to Kyiv — leaving the horrified mom now pleading with him to help end their suffering and bring peace to their war-torn homeland. Nataliia Makhno and her daughter Anastasiia were walking home from the grocery store in Sumy on Monday when the sudden roar of drones and explosions sent them scrambling for cover at a nearby house — a terrifying routine that has become all too familiar in recent months. 'Fear is a present all the time, but we do not have a choice,' Nataliia told The Post. Advertisement 5 Nataliia Makhno and her daughter Anastasiia were walking home from the grocery store when they were hurt in Monday's drone blast in Sumy. Obtained by the NY Post 'War has come to us, and we live and try to survive in this situation. We are ordinary people, and we had just come from the store. It was an ordinary day.' But their ordinary day spiraled into horror when the explosion hit, leaving Anastasiia's body riddled with shrapnel wounds and suffering from severe blast trauma. Advertisement She was rushed to Sumy Regional Children's Hospital, where the shrapnel was removed, and her condition has since improved. The youngster — an award-winning modern dancer — is receiving inpatient care and will now be forced to put her passion on hold until she recovers, her devastated mother said. Nataliia, who suffered blast trauma and an inner ear injury from the deafening boom, said drone attacks have become a 'constant' in recent months. 'Living here is scary, but sadly, we have become used to it,' the wounded mother said. 5 A burned-out building after a drone strike in Sumy, Ukraine. Obtained by the NY Post Advertisement 'People live and work. Children study online and at school. All while being in danger.' Nataliia previously lived with her family in Myrophilla — a village along the Russian border that was decimated when the country launched its full-scale invasion in 2022 — until her husband, a serviceman stationed in the Sumy region, relocated them to a larger city in the hopes of keeping them safe. 'Everyone left because there were heavy shelling, and Russians destroyed a lot of buildings,' the scared mom said, noting her daughter's school was also leveled. 'We have a marvelous school there, and they destroyed it, as well. So many people had to evacuate.' Advertisement 5 Nataliia Makhno and her 14-year-old daughter Anastasiia were injured in a Russian drone attack in Sumy, Ukraine. Obtained by the NY Post But the brutal strikes have only escalated since the family uprooted their lives — a grim reality Nataliia has also faced as a nurse treating injured victims of attacks similar to the one that left her 'very stressed and frightened' daughter hospitalized. 'We all hoped that there would be help and peace would come quickly, but for some reasons unknown to us, it does not come,' she said. 'Most of us are waiting for a miracle to happen, and [Russian President Vladimir] Putin will stop shooting. We hope for it every second. We pray to God and ask that we have a peaceful sky, and we could just live as we lived before. This is war, a totally incomprehensible war.' 5 Anastasiia, an award-winning modern dancer, will have to put her passions on hold as she recovers. Obtained by the NY Post Russia launched its attack on the devastated country overnight Monday after Trump announced the US will send 'billions of dollars' worth of weapons to Ukraine and threatened to impose 'secondary tariffs' on Moscow's business partners if a peace agreement isn't reached in 50 days. Five were killed and at least 43 injured, including four children, in attacks across Ukraine, local media reported. Shattered Nataliia is now begging Trump to act swiftly and help end the nightmare they've endured throughout the 40-month-long war. Advertisement 5 New York Post front page: 'Breaking Vlad,' Trump will provide more arms to Ukraine, gives Putin a 50-day deadline. 'I would like to ask very much that he help us so that peace comes to our Ukraine and that we can live as before when we were not afraid and our children lived under a peaceful sky,' Nataliia said. 'He can help us to cope with such a terrible misfortune that has come to us so that we can be here, live, rejoice, marry, have children and wait for grandchildren. 'Our children should be able to live calmly, grow, live quietly, work and be happy.'

2 hours ago
Trump defends giving Putin '50 days' to make peace with Ukraine
After President Donald Trump threatened to impose "very severe" economic penalties against Vladimir Putin's Russia if he doesn't agree to a ceasefire in Ukraine within 50 days, the Trump administration has so far declined to provide many additional details about the consequences Russia will face or why he picked the deadline he chose. "Well, at the end of 50 days, if we don't have a deal, it's going to be too bad," Trump told reporters at the White House on Tuesday. When asked why he decided to give the Russian leader nearly two months to comply with his demand, President Trump deflected. "I don't think 50 days is very long. It could be sooner than that," Trump said. "You should have asked that same question to Biden. Why did he get us into this war?" he continued. "You know why he got us in? Because he's a dummy, that's why." Despite pledging additional U.S. made weapons for Ukraine, Trump also said he didn't support Ukraine's President Zelenskyy ordering strikes on the Russian capital. "He shouldn't target Moscow," he said. "No, we're not looking to do that." What Trump is threatening On Monday, Trump said that Russia's failure to reach a negotiated settlement with Ukraine within 50 days would lead to his administration imposing a 100% tariff rate on Russian imports as well as what he called "secondary tariffs" on countries that have continued to do business with Moscow. "We're very, very unhappy with him," Trump said of Putin on Monday. "We're going to be doing very severe tariffs if we don't have a deal in 50 days." U.S. imports from Russia, which totaled around $3 billion in 2024 according to the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative, account for a small share of Moscow's revenue, meaning Trump's threat to hike tariffs on Russian goods likely wouldn't pack much punch. However, the president's promise to raise tariffs on imports from third-party countries could carry more weight. Some secondary sanctions aimed at weakening Russia's war economy are already in place. The Biden administration steadily ramped up its use of the penalties throughout the conflict, primarily targeting foreign financial institutions accused of supporting Moscow's military industrial complex and the so-called "shadow fleet" of tanker operators working to circumvent Western sanctions and price caps on Russian oil. But going after countries that import oil and other resources from Russia would be a significant escalation. Through much of the war, the Biden administration avoided taking direct aim at Russian energy exporters out of concern that doing so would cause global fuel prices to rise. Instead, the former administration worked with other members of the G7 to cap the price of Russian oil products, cutting into Moscow's profits while allowing the exports to remain on the market. Trump, on the other hand, has previously promised to go after Russia's customers. In March, Trump threatened to put "secondary tariffs on oil, on all oil coming out of Russia" during an interview with NBC News -- adding "if you buy oil from Russia, you can't do business in the United States." What countries would feel the impact? The White House has yet to release specific details on Trump's secondary tariffs, but his ambassador to NATO, Matthew Whitaker, said on Monday the top importers of Russian oil would be in the administration's crosshairs. "It's about tariffs on countries like India and China that are buying their oil. And it really is going to I think dramatically impact the Russian economy," he said during an interview with CNN. But whether the secondary tariffs would stop at countries like China and India is an open question. Despite the web of sanctions in place against Russia, the country still has many meaningful trade relationships, including ones with European allies. Since Russia's invasion of Ukraine, the EU has significantly dropped its share of Russian oil and gas imports and its plan to fully phase out those imports isn't expected to fully come to fruition until the end of 2027 at the earliest. Some Eastern European and Central Asian countries also have economies that rely on doing business with Russia, meaning they would almost certainly be unable to significantly scale back trade with Russia and would have the face the consequences of secondary tariffs. The next 50 days If the president sticks to his 50-day window, Russia can continue to carry out its summertime campaign against Ukraine until early September without facing additional consequences. In his interview with CNN, Whitaker was also asked about how Trump made the decision on the timeline but didn't give a clear answer. "The time to end the slaughter is now. The time to end the killing is now. And so 50 days is the appropriate amount of time because it needs to happen now," he responded. Currently, Russia is making modest gains against Ukraine and may soon seek to leverage those advances to launch additional offenses in the eastern reach of the country, according to a recent assessment from the Institute of the Study of War. Many officials and experts have long predicted that the Kremlin would push off serious talks on ending the war until the cooler months set in because it hopes to strengthen its position at the negotiating table by claiming as much territory as possible during the summer season. In an interview with the BBC on Monday, Trump indicated he still wanted to pursue diplomacy with Russia, but that his patience with Putin was wearing thin. "I'm not done with him, but I'm disappointed with him," he said.