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Sweden calls on the EU to ban support for Russian gas and oil-shipping fleet

According to the Swedish Foreign Minister, sanctions should be introduced against Russian fertilisers, and companies should not provide any support for Moscow's oil-and-gas-shipping fleet.

The bloc of 27 nations is currently preparing their 20th package of sanctions to punish Russia for its conflict in Ukraine. Prior sanctions focused on crippling the oil and gas sector, which is the Kremlin’s main source of revenue.

At a yearly security conference held in Salen in western Sweden, Foreign Minister Maria Malmer Stenergard stated that "the pressure on Russia?has to increase".

Stenergard stated that the EU's "next package of sanctions" should include a ban on all European companies who provide?services? to Russian vessels carrying coal, oil and gas.

She said: "No port repairs, no insurance, no transport, and no reloading between ships of goods."

The EU should also impose restrictions on the export of Russian fertilisers, which is Russia's third-largest export to the EU.

In July of last year, the EU imposed tariffs against fertiliser imports coming from Russia. Russia is responsible for more than 20 percent of all fertiliser produced in the world and supplies around 25 percent of EU fertiliser imports.

She said, "We want to stop the export of luxury goods from Europe to Russia." "It frustrates me that wealthy Russian consumers can buy expensive?Italian clothes and drink fine French wine."

Since the invasion of Ukraine by Russia in 2022, the EU has imposed a total of 19 sanctions packages against Russia. (Reporting and editing by Bernadette Bavier and Joe Bavier; Reporting by Simon Johnson)

(source: Reuters)