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Putin blames Brexit on London’s ‘overconfidence’

Russian President Vladimir Putin on Friday said the British government was "overconfident" and "superficial" in the EU referendum, and denied taking a position on Brexit.
Russian President Vladimir Putin . / AFP PHOTO / POOL / Alexander Zemlianichenko

Russian President Vladimir Putin . / AFP PHOTO / POOL / Alexander Zemlianichenko

Russian President Vladimir Putin on Friday said the British government was “overconfident” and “superficial” in the EU referendum, and denied taking a position on Brexit.

The organisation of the referendum was “nothing more than overconfidence and a superficial approach to solving fateful decisions for one’s country, and Europe as a whole, on the part of the British leadership,” Putin said,in comments broadcast on Russian state television.

“It will have consequences for the United Kingdom, for all of Europe and for us, of course,” he added.

Many observers have said that Brexit would play into the Putin’s hands as he has been accused of driving a wedge between EU members.

But Putin on Friday said that Russia had never “interferred, never expressed our opinion on the matter” and dismissed attempts to associate Moscow with the UK vote to split from the European bloc.

“Of course we closely followed what is happening but did not in any way influence the process and didn’t even try to,” the Russian strongman said.

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov also stressed there was no indication that Moscow was pleased with the result of the vote.

“The topic of Brexit is Britain’s domestic issue and an issue of its relations with the EU,” said Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov.

– Economic warning –
Putin also said Russia would strive to minimise Brexit’s potential effect on the Russian economy, which is already reeling from low oil prices and the devaluation of its currency.

Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev warned that Brexit’s impact on markets has created “additional risks for the world economy, and therefore, for our economy.”

The British vote to leave the EU demonstrated the desire to stop “feeding and subsidising weaker economies” and showed the population was “dissatisfied with the approach to security questions” amid the continent’s migration crisis, Putin said.

Russia’s foreign ministry said in a statement that the vote had “shown there are serious contradictions in the European Union.”

As for EU sanctions against Russia, Putin said Brexit was unlikely to affect the bans Brussels imposed on Moscow over the Ukraine crisis.

Britain’s relations with Russia have soured in recent years, notably over efforts to prosecute the case of Kremlin critic Alexander Litvinenko who was murdered by poisoning in London.

Peskov however said Moscow hoped that Britain’s decision to exit the EU would not damage relations.

“We have a very complicated history… in bilateral relations, we can’t always say that our British partners are ready to communicate and cooperate,” he told journalists.

“We hope that in the new reality, the understanding of a necessity to build good relations with our country will prevail.”

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