Russian parliament to challenge French assembly over 'French mercenaries' in Ukraine
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Russian parliament to challenge French assembly over 'French mercenaries' in Ukraine
MOSCOW (Reuters) - The lower house of the Russian parliament, the State Duma, plans to formally ask France's National Assembly if it is aware that French mercenaries have been fighting on Ukraine's side, the Duma's chairman said on Friday.
Vyacheslav Volodin, an ally of President Vladimir Putin, made the statement after the Russian Defence Ministry said on Wednesday that its forces had killed more than 60 foreign mercenaries, mostly French citizens, in a strike on a building in Kharkiv. It did not provide evidence to back the assertion.
France rejected the allegations, saying it was helping Ukraine defend its sovereignty, independence and territorial integrity but had no mercenaries in Ukraine "unlike certain others".
"In France, the mercenary trade is forbidden by law," Volodin wrote on the Telegram messaging app.
"It is important for us to know whether they (French lawmakers) are aware that someone, violating the law, is sending fighters to fight in Ukraine."
French officials said the allegations were part of a Russian campaign to discredit France.
"It's a disinformation plot conducted by Russia," a senior aide to Thomas Gassilloud, head of the National Assembly's defence committee, told Reuters.
A French diplomatic source told : "It's Russian propaganda, unhealthy and unfounded, that we have denied. More than anything it gives you a taste of what the Russians are preparing."