Russia-US Tensions Flare over Adopted Boy's Death

Russia-US Tensions Flare over Adopted Boy's Death

The US ambassador to Moscow and a top Russian lawmaker traded blows Thursday over the death of a Russian child adopted in the United States, in a row that threatens to overshadow upcoming talks with the new US secretary of state.

The emotionally-charged exchange came after US ambassador Michael McFaul refused to show up in the Russian parliament’s lower house to answer questions about recent deaths of Russian children adopted by American parents.

McFaul countered that he was “always happy” to meet Russian officials to discuss adoptions but would not do so in parliament.

Since Putin’s return to the Kremlin for a third term in May, Russia and the United States have been at odds over a growing number of issues.

Late last year, Russia banned all adoptions by American parents, a measure that came in reprisal for US legislation that targets Russian officials deemed to have committed rights abuses.

Tensions flared again earlier this week over the January death in the United States of a 3-year-old Russian boy, Maxim Kuzmin, with Russian investigators saying the boy was murdered by his adoptive American mother.

The little boy’s death will be among key topics of a meeting next week between Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov and new US Secretary of State John Kerry, the foreign ministry’s human rights envoy Konstantin Dolgov told Russian lawmakers on Thursday.

If the ongoing investigation proves that the US parents murdered their adoptive Russian son, they will be severely punished, he said in comments posted on the website of the ruling United Russia party.

Some officials have recently raised the prospect of Russia banning all foreign adoptions in the future and even bringing back home the Russian orphans already adopted by American parents and living in the United States.

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