BBC slams Russian expulsion of journalist
Moscow, Aug 14: The BBC on Friday condemned Russia's "direct assault on media freedom" after authorities refused to extend Moscow correspondent Sarah Rainsford's visa, forcing her to leave the country.
The British broadcaster has asked Russia to "reconsider" the decision which was announced by Russian state TV Rossiya 24 on Thursday night.

What has the BBC said?
"The expulsion of Sarah Rainsford is a direct assault on media freedom, which we condemn unreservedly," said BBC director-general Tim Davie.
Sarah Rainsford, who speaks fluent Russian, has been reporting on and off in Russia for 30 years, having made Moscow her home since 2014 at her current posting.
She's one of the British broadcaster's two English-language correspondents in Moscow.

Davie called her "an exceptional and fearless journalist… who provides independent and in-depth reporting of Russia and the former Soviet Union."
"We urge the Russian authorities to reconsider their decision," Davie added. "In the meantime, we will continue to report events in the region independently and impartially.''
Rainsford now has until the end of August to leave the country.
What did Russia say?
A Russian TV channel presenter on Rossiya 24 said on Thursday evening that it was "a milestone expulsion" after Rainsford had "crossed all our red lines."
The presenter said the decision followed UK rejections of visas for Russian journalists of broadcaster RT and online state news outlet Sputnik.
Neither Russia's Foreign Ministry nor its embassy in London had anything official to say about the announcement.
But Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova said on her Telegram channel that "everything was explained in detail to BBC representatives who recently visited the Foreign Ministry."
Zakharova, who never identified Rainsford by name, added that the ministry had made "regular statements, urging the British to end persecution of Russian journalists."
Rainsford's effective expulsion followed a Foreign Ministry statement saying certain unnamed UK nationals would no longer be allowed in Russia for "involvement in anti-Russian activities." It is not clear whether Rainsford was one of them.
This latest controversy further worsens relations between Moscow and London following a series of international incidents between the two countries, including the 2018 nerve agent poisoning of a former double agent, Sergei Skripal, in England.
Source: DW
-
Gold Silver Rate Today, 16 March 2026: City-Wise Prices As MCX Gold Slips, Silver Near Monthly Lows -
Bangalore Gold Silver Rate Today, 16 March 2026: Gold and Silver Prices Fall as Precious Metals Turn Volatile -
West Bengal Elections Predictions: Is BJP Ready To End Mamata's Rule? Check Pre Poll Survey Report -
BJP Candidates List For West Bengal Elections 2026: Suvendu Adhikari Gets Dual Seat as Party Releases 144-Name -
TVK Candidate List For Tamil Nadu Election: Vijay Likely From Velachery; Bussy Anand For T Nagar -
Karnataka Rain: Bengaluru's First Pre-Monsoon Showers Likely in Next 48 Hours; Thunderstorm Chances at 90–100% -
Hyderabad Gold Silver Rate Today, 16 March 2026: City Bullion Prices Stay Elevated Across Gold, Silver -
Oscars 2026 Best Picture Winner Announced: ‘One Battle After Another’ Takes the Top Prize -
What Is Passive Euthanasia? Harish Rana’s Family Bids Him Goodbye, Says, 'Forgive All, Time To Go Now' -
Trisha To Marry Thalapathy Vijay After 2026 TN Polls? Actress’ Mother Drops Hint Amid Actor’s Divorce Case -
French President Emmanuel Macron Warns Iran Over Regional Attacks: “Put An Immediate End ...' -
No LPG Booking Without eKYC?? Govt Makes Biometric Authentication Mandatory for Consumers; Details Inside












Click it and Unblock the Notifications