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Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott dubs Russia ‘a bully’ over sanctions

Russia's reaction to Western sanctions shows it is a 'bully', Abbott says after Moscow bans food imports and threatens to curtail air passage over its territory

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Tony Abbott leaves St Patrick's Cathedral in Melbourne after a memorial service for victims of Malaysia Airlines flight MH17 on Thursday. Photo: Xinhua

Australia’s prime minister dubbed Russia “a bully” and threatened stronger sanctions against the country on Friday following Russia’s ban on most Western food imports.

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Russia’s government on Thursday banned most food imports from the West – including the US, European Union and Australia – as retaliation against sanctions related to the crisis in Ukraine.

Prime Minister Tony Abbott said the ban would have a relatively small impact on his country, which last year exported about 400 million Australian dollars (HK$2.9 billion) of agricultural products to Russia – roughly 1 per cent of its total agriculture exports. And he warned Russian President Vladimir Putin to withdraw the thousands of Russian troops that have amassed at the Ukrainian border, saying that any advancement into Ukraine would amount to an invasion.

Australian investigators examine the crash site of Malaysia Airlines flight MH17 plane crash in eastern Ukraine last week. Photo: AP
Australian investigators examine the crash site of Malaysia Airlines flight MH17 plane crash in eastern Ukraine last week. Photo: AP

“Let’s be very clear about this: Russia has been a bully,” Abbott said. “And I say to President Putin that if he wants to be regarded as a world leader, as opposed to becoming an international outcast: Hold your forces back. Stay behind the border. Let the business of Ukraine be sorted out by Ukrainians.”

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Australia was one of several countries that slapped sanctions on Russia amid accusations the country has supplied weapons and expertise to pro-Moscow separatists in eastern Ukraine. Last month, the crisis escalated when Malaysia Airlines flight MH17 was shot down over rebel-held territory, killing all 298 people on board, including 28 Australian citizens.

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