(Bloomberg) -- Italian Deputy Premier Matteo Salvini travels to Moscow Wednesday to drive home one of his favorite points: that European Union sanctions on Russia hurt Italy and should be repealed.

“I am convinced that anti-Russian sanctions are a social, cultural and economic absurdity, and we will try to explain and convince all our partners of this, including discussions at the European level,” Salvini said in an interview with Tass published before he landed.

Salvini’s office says he’s on a private trip to attend the annual meeting of the Russian branch of Italy’s main business lobby Confindustria. Salvini himself said said on his Facebook page today he’ll “meet hundreds of Italian entrepreneurs who resist, despite everything and everybody.”

No meetings with Russian leaders are scheduled and he’s due back in Italy Thursday.

Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte follows Salvini with an official visit to Moscow on Oct. 24, where he’s expected to meet with his counterparts from the Russian administration.

Italy’s previous government, swept from office in March’s election, went along with several rounds of sanctions imposed after Russia annexed Crimea and intervened in eastern Ukraine in 2014, though it too grumbled about the effect on exporters.

Salvini, whose power base is small businesses in the export-oriented north of Italy, opposed the sanctions before forming a government in June and has continued to criticize them since. Coalition partner Five Star has also spoken out against the costs to Italy of the Russia sanctions. Salvini has repeatedly denied Italian media claims that his party receives Russian financial support.

EU Unity

Italian exports to Russia peaked at 10.8 billion euros ($12.5 billion) in 2013, before tumbling 37 percent to 6.8 billion in 2016, according to Italy’s Industry Ministry. They rebounded to 8 billion euros in 2017. Imports from Russia fell 39 percent from 2013 to last year.

Russia is Italy’s 14th largest export market, accounting for just 1.5 percent of total exports so far this year. At the 2013 peak, Russia took 2.3 percent of Italian exports.

The EU’s economic penalties against Russia have been prolonged most recently until next Jan. 31, a separate set of asset freezes and travel bans runs until at least March 15.

Conte, an academic chosen to mediate between the League and Five Star, struck a more measured tone ahead of his own visit. He told the Senate on Monday that EU relations with Russia must be “firm but with dialogue.”

“Sanctions solely for the sake of sanctions only damage our companies and Russian civil society,” he said, appealing to the EU to help small and medium companies hurt by the measures. “We must maintain EU unity relations with Russia.”

--With assistance from Jonathan Stearns and Lorenzo Totaro.

To contact the reporter on this story: Gregory Viscusi in Paris at gviscusi@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Alan Crawford at acrawford6@bloomberg.net, Ben Sills, Zoe Schneeweiss

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