Moskau beschwört den deutschen Botschafter wegen japanischer Behauptung auf die Kurilinseln

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The German ambassador to Russia, Alexander Graf Lambsdorff, has been summoned to the Russian Foreign Ministry.

In a protest note, the ministry on Monday warned Germany not to cast doubt on the results of World War II by recognizing Japanese claims on Russia's southern Kuril Islands.

The islands' status is part of the post-war order recognized by the United Nations, it added. "Russian sovereignty is undisputed here."

Moscow accused Germany's ambassador to Japan, Petra Sigmund, of questioning Russian sovereignty over the islands, and said the issue was "particularly mocking" in the year of the 80th anniversary of the end of World War II.

Germany's embassy in Moscow rebuffed the criticism. "We reject the accusation that the statements allegedly violated Russia's sovereignty."

The comments were believed to be linked to a visit by Sigmund and another diplomat to the Japanese city of Nemuro, on the island of Hokkaido, which is near the southern Kuril Islands.

Lambsdorff highlighted that the visit was being used as an occasion for protest "while at the same time Russia is violating the sovereignty and territorial integrity of Ukraine in the most serious way every day with several hundred thousand soldiers."

The ambassador has repeatedly denounced the Russian invasion of Ukraine.

"Russia's revisionism is the problem of international politics of our time, because it is Moscow that knowingly and continuously disregards and violates both the basic principles of the European peace order and those of the UN Charter," the statement said.

Lambsdorff was last summoned by the Russian Foreign Ministry in late June to inform him of "retaliatory measures" in response to the alleged persecution of Russian journalists in Germany.

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Source german news
german news