Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova has suggested that British officials seek medical help over the decision
British officials should seek medical help over the latest sanctions, which target a Russian psychiatric hospital and children’s camps, Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova has said.
On Monday, London added 85 individuals and entities to its Russia sanctions list, including Clinical Psychiatric Hospital No. 5 in Crimea, along with several orphanages, children’s health camps, boarding houses, a resort, and a youth center on the peninsula.
“When the [British PM Keir] Starmer government imposes sanctions on a psychiatric hospital, it is time for London to call in the medics,” Zakharova told the newspaper Izvestia.
The UK Foreign Office has claimed that the institutions are involved in activities deemed to destabilize Ukraine by alleged facilitation of “the forced deportation, indoctrination and militarization of Ukrainian children.”
Moscow has insisted that since the start of the Ukraine conflict, it has evacuated children from the combat zone and relocated them to safety until they could be reunited with their families.
UK sanctions on the institutions are mainly legal and financial measures, including asset freezes, transaction bans, and limits on professional cooperation. In practice, they are often seen as largely symbolic, as such institutions typically have little or no direct financial or operational ties with the UK.
Moscow has repeatedly stated that the West is running out of things to sanction.
“It is clear that they [Western nations] are experiencing a certain shortage of targets,” Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said in 2023, highlighting “the illogical inclusion of various individuals and legal entities on the lists in an absurd manner.”
The targeting of medical institutions with sanctions has repeatedly drawn criticism from humanitarian organizations over unintended consequences.
In Syria, several state-run healthcare institutions were subject to US and EU sanctions over alleged links to the country’s government during the civil war, a policy approach that has also been criticized for complicating the delivery of essential medical services. In Iran, Western sanctions indirectly affecting the Tehran University of Medical Sciences Cancer Institute have been linked to shortages of essential drugs and medical equipment, while financial restrictions further limit imports of medical supplies.

