Major Russian banks will be excluded from the UK financial system and oligarchs have been targeted in new sanctions announced by Boris Johnson.
The prime minister told the House of Commons they were “the largest and most severe package of economic sanctions that Russia has ever seen”.
Russia’s national airline Aeroflot will also be banned from landing in the UK.
It follows Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine which began with air strikes in the early hours of Thursday morning.
Mr Johnson told MPs that Russian President Vladimir Putin was a “bloodstained aggressor” who would “stand condemned in the eyes of the world and of history” for invading Ukraine.
Announcing the measures, the prime minister said the UK and its allies had “tried every avenue for diplomacy until the final hour”, but he believed Mr Putin had always been determined to attack Ukraine.
Mr Johnson said the G7 group of world leaders had agreed to work in unity to “maximise the economic price that Putin will pay for his aggression”.
He also confirmed that sanctions would be applied to Belarus for its role in the assault on Ukraine.
Sanctions announced by the prime minister include:
All major Russian banks will have their assets frozen and be excluded from the UK financial system. This will stop them from accessing sterling and clearing payments through the UK. This includes a full and immediate freeze of VTB bank
Legislation will stop major Russian companies and the state from raising finance or borrowing money on UK markets
Asset freezes will be placed on 100 new individuals or businesses
Aeroflot will be banned from landing in the UK
There will be a suspension of dual-use export licences to cover components which can be used for military purposes
Within days the UK will stop exports of high-tech items and oil refinery equipment
There will be a limit on deposits Russians can make in UK bank accounts
Similar financial sanctions will be extended to Belarus for its role in the assault on Ukraine
The UK will bring forward parts of the Economic Crime Bill before the Easter recess
Mr Johnson said there was potential to cut Russia out from the Swift international payment system and “nothing is off the table”
Those being targeted by sanctions include five people deemed to be part of Mr Putin’s “inner circle”, the Foreign Office said in a statement issued after Mr Johnson’s announcement.
These include Mr Putin’s ex-son in law Kirill Shamalov who was previously married to his daughter Katarina and is Russia’s youngest billionaire.
Other targets include Petr Fradkov, head of the recently sanctioned Promsvyazbank and son of the former head of Russian Foreign Intelligence.
Businesses targeted include Rostec, Russia’s biggest defence company, Tactical Missile Corporation, Russia’s leading supplier of air and sea missiles, and Uralvagonzavod, one of the world’s largest tank manufacturers, the Foreign Office said.
It also said it was moving to cut off wealthy Russians’ access to UK banks, including a £50,000 limit on bank deposits.
Mr Johnson said the UK and its allies’ mission was to ensure through diplomatic, economic, and eventually military means that the “hideous and barbarous venture of Mr Putin” ended in failure.
Foreign Secretary Liz Truss said the UK would “not rest until Russia’s economy has been degraded and Ukraine’s sovereignty and territorial integrity restored”.
The new measures expand the sanctions that were announced by the UK government on Tuesday, which included targeting high-net worth individuals and Russian politicians who voted to declare Donetsk and Luhansk independent.
A number of MPs and defence experts said those measures had not gone far enough.
Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer said he welcomed the sanctions outlined by Mr Johnson, and pledged opposition support for further measures.
But he said there were changes that must be made in the UK.
“For too long our country has been a safe haven for money Putin and his fellow bandits stole from the Russian people” he said.
Conservative former Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunt said that while sanctions are “extremely welcome” they should not only be economic and called for a “fundamental review of our military capability”.
Conservative MP Tom Tugendhat, who chairs the Foreign Affairs Committee, urged Mr Johnson to take action against those “enabling Putin’s economy” – including individuals who sit on the boards of the businesses which finance the Russian president’s regime.
Liberal Democrat leader Sir Ed Davey said the West “cannot be complacent any longer” and called for a reversal of proposed troop cuts to the Army.
SNP Westminster leader Ian Blackford called for the “complete economic isolation of Russia”, including “clearing up the sewer of dirty Russian money” in London and suspending Russia from the Swift payment system.
Ukrainian protesters outside Downing Street
IMAGE SOURCE,EPA
Image caption,
Ukrainian protesters gathered outside Downing Street on Thursday afternoon
On Thursday morning Russian forces launched an assault on Ukraine, crossing its borders and bombing military targets near big cities.
Russian military vehicles are reported to have breached Ukraine’s border in a number of places, in the north, south and east, including from Belarus.
Ukraine has announced martial law across the country, meaning the military has taken control temporarily.
Traffic jams have built up as people attempt to flee the capital Kyiv.
Meanwhile, the Home Office has said it will allow some Ukrainian nationals in the UK to extend their visas.
Those eligible for points-based work visas will be allowed to extend their stay or to switch from visitor visas and seasonal agricultural workers will have their visas automatically extended until the end of 2022.
Source: BBC