The Russian Foreign Ministry on Thursday summoned the German ambassador to announce the expulsion of two diplomats. It comes a week after two Russian officials were told to leave Germany in connection with the murder of a former Chechen commander in Berlin.

"As a retaliatory measure, the Russian side has decided to declare two employees of the German embassy in Russia 'persona non grata'," the Russian foreign ministry said in a statement.

A spokeswoman for the German Foreign Ministry said the move "sends the wrong signal and is unjustified."

DW's Moscow correspondent Emily Sherwin noted that in comparison to the attempted killing of former Russian spy Sergei Skripal in the UK in 2018, where each country expelled 23 diplomats, "both sides are treading carefully."

German ambassdor Geza von Geyr said he "acknowledges with regret" the decision from the Kremlin to "declare two employees of the German embassy in Moscow personae non gratae." He added that the two diplomats in question "have with full integrity worked in this host country and have done nothing worthy of blame."

'Unavoidable'

The two countries are currently awaiting the completion of the controversial Nordstream-2 gas pipeline, which is set to run directly from Russia to Germany through the Baltic Sea.

Speaking after the expulsion, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said it was an "unavoidable" retaliatory measure to Berlin's expulsions last week. He expressed hope that the move would not negatively affect ties.

On Monday, Vladimir Putin said Moscow was ready to assist in the investigation into the murder and "do everything to help our German colleagues." Putin also denied that there was a diplomatic "crisis" between the two countries.

The background to the story

Last week, the German government expelled two Russian diplomats, saying that Russia was not cooperating with an investigation into the killing of the Georgian citizen in August. He was shot in broad daylight in a park in the German capital's Moabit neighborhood.

The victim, 40-year-old Zelimkhan Khangoshvili, had reportedly worked for both Ukrainian and Russian interests after the Second Chechen War, which lasted from 1999 to 2009.

German federal prosecutors have said that there was "sufficient evidence" to indicate that the man's murder may have been carried on Moscow's behalf, something the Kremlin has vehemently denied.

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es/rt (Reuters, dpa)

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