Lithuanian government mulls extended persona non grata list

“As a member of the European Union, Lithuania coordinates sanction issues with other EU countries and speaks in support of making them tougher. Listing specific Russian performers as personae non gratae has not been approved yet but we do not rule out discussing it in the future, if needed, to combat propaganda, which instigates hatred and conflicts,” Butkevičius told BNS via his spokeswoman Evelina Butkutė-Lazdauskienė.

Conservative MP and former defence minister Rasa Juknevičienė has voiced a staunch position on the matter – Russian performers supporting President Vladimir Putin’s aggression in Ukraine are unwelcome in Lithuania.

“The whole [softer] argument, ‘let’s just not promote the performers, let them have a few concerts, nobody listens to them anyway’ may have been comprehensible three years ago, but I think that tactic is not relevant today. A highly principled and clear-cut decision is needed to draw a line of values that Lithuania has always drawn… [to separate ourselves] and show [the world] what is evil and who the collaborators are who support imperialist policies,” Juknevičienė told BNS.

Meanwhile, Eligijus Masiulis, leader of the opposition Liberal Movement, says that expulsion of a few performers will not solve any problems. His dream is that one day those same performers fail to sell enough tickets and be forced to cancel concerts in Lithuania.

The Labour Party’s founder Viktor Uspaskich says the bans would sway Lithuania back to the Soviet era.

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