Blinken calls for Russia to release two U.S. citizens at Geneva talks
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[January 21, 2022]
By Simon Lewis
GENEVA (Reuters) - U.S. Secretary of State
Antony Blinken on Friday raised the cases of Paul Whelan and Trevor
Reed, two U.S. citizens detained in Russia and repeated Washington's
call for their release during talks with his Russian counterpart Sergei
Lavrov in Geneva.
The top diplomats of Russia and the United States met in the Swiss city
amid soaring tensions over Ukraine, after talks between their deputies
last week failed to achieve a breakthrough.
In opening remarks witnessed by reporters, Blinken told Lavrov that
along Russia's military buildup near its border with Ukraine he would
also discuss the two Americans' cases during the meeting.
The two “were tourists in Russia, were arrested, were convicted without
credible evidence,” Blinken said. "We again ask Russia to do the right
thing and let them come home."
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U.S. ex-Marine Trevor Reed, who was detained in 2019 and accused of
assaulting police officers, stands inside a defendants' cage during
a court hearing in Moscow, Russia March 11, 2020. REUTERS/Tatyana
Makeyeva//File Photo
Russia convicted Whelan - who holds
U.S., British, Canadian and Irish passports - of spying in June 2020
and sentenced him to 16 years in jail. He denied the charge and said
he was set up in a sting operation.
Reed was sentenced to nine years in jail after being found
guilty of endangering the lives of two policemen in Moscow while
drunk on a visit in 2019. He denied the charges and the United
States called his trial a "theater of the absurd."
(Reporting by Simon Lewis; Editing by Tomasz Janowski)
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