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UK says relationship with Russia 'not the one we want'
by AFP Staff Writers
London (AFP) Oct 25, 2021

The leaders of Britain and Russia spoke in a rare phone call on Monday in advance of the COP26 summit, with London expressing frustration at the tense state of ties.

President Vladimir Putin said he regrets being unable to attend the UN climate summit starting next week in Glasgow, Prime Minister Boris Johnson's Downing Street office said.

Johnson hoped that Russia would take more ambitious steps towards curbing carbon emissions and ending deforestation, his office added.

"The prime minister was clear that the UK's current relationship with Russia is not the one we want. He said significant bilateral difficulties remain," it said.

Downing Street highlighted the 2018 poisoning of Russian former spy Sergei Skripal in Salisbury and the conflict in Ukraine.

British police say three members of Russian military intelligence carried out a nerve agent attack in March 2018 in the English cathedral city.

While Skripal and his daughter recovered, a local woman who came into contact with the nerve agent -- Novichok -- later died.

Relations between Britain and other Western countries and Russia plummeted over Moscow's 2014 annexation of Crimea from Ukraine, and they accuse Moscow of continuing to support separatists in the country's east.

In its own statement on the call, the Kremlin said Putin and Johnson agreed that "despite the existence of known problems, it would be necessary to establish cooperation between Moscow and London in a number of areas".

Downing Street said Johnson stressed that London and Moscow had a "responsibility to work together" on issues including the Iran nuclear deal.

The two leaders last spoke in May 2020, marking the 75th anniversary of the end of World War II in Europe.


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SUPERPOWERS
Modi confirms COP26 attendance in boost to summit
New Delhi (AFP) Oct 24, 2021
India's Prime Minister Narendra Modi will attend the COP26 climate summit, his office confirmed Sunday, in a major boost for the conference that has already been snubbed by key world leaders. More than 120 world leaders are expected to attend the biggest climate summit since the 2015 Paris talks on November 1-2, but China's President Xi Jinping and Russia's President Vladimir Putin will be conspicuously absent. Climate envoys from the United States, European Union and the summit's British organi ... read more

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