INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
government said Tuesday that anyone working in Britain for the Russian state will have to register on a new list launching in July or face
jail.Security Minister Dan Jarvis told parliament that Russia would be subject to the most stringent restrictions of the Foreign Influence
Registration Scheme (Firs).It becomes the second country after Iran to be added to the so-called enhanced tier of the scheme, which aims to
must declare the work or face five years in prison."Russia presents an acute threat to U.K
national security," said Jarvis, a junior minister in the interior ministry known as the Home Office.He highlighted "hostile acts" such as
the use of a deadly nerve agent in Salisbury, southern England in 2018, espionage, arson and cyber attacks, including the targeting of UK
parliamentarians through spear-phishing campaigns.Jarvis also cited Russia's invasion of Ukraine and its "intent to undermine European and
global security."The Home Office said anyone working for Russian government agencies, armed forces, intelligence services and police force,
parliaments and their judiciaries would be subject to the measures.Jarvis added the government also intends to "specify several political
parties which are controlled by Russia, including the United Russia party" under the scheme.Home Secretary Yvette Cooper said the rules
"will make it harder for Russia to conduct hostile acts against us in [the] future."Firs had been due to go into effect in 2024 but the new
Labour government of Prime Minister Keir Starmer announced shortly after elections in July that it was being delayed.Jarvis announced it
would now take effect from July 1.Under Firs' lower tier, anyone seeking to influence political decisions on behalf of any foreign power
must register their activities.The enhanced tier is a status reserved for nations that are deemed to pose a risk to the safety of U.K
national interests.It requires all activities carried out at the instruction of any designated state to be registered.Last month, the
government announced that Iran would be in the higher tier, meaning anyone working for its regime, including intelligence services and the
Revolutionary Guard, must declare their work.The government has so far resisted calls to add China to the top tier, as it seeks to improve
relations with Beijing in the hope it will spur Chinese investment in Britain's economy.Conservative MP Iain Duncan Smith, a known China
hawk, said the Asian giant should be included because it was "at the epicenter of everything to disrupt democracy and freedom."Jarvis said
he would not speculate on "which countries may or may not specified in the future."