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Russian oil magnate Mikhail Khodorkovsky (C) listens to Platon Lebedev (R), another key shareholder in oil group YUKOS, as they stand inside a cage guarded by an interior ministry serviceman at the Meshchansky court / Photo: Reuters
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LINKS
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A
group of Russia’s top businessmen formed close ties with the country’s
leadership in the 1990s, gaining significant influence with the Presidential Administration
Vladimir Putin
Vladimir Gusinsky: The Trials of a Media Baron
One
of the first to suffer President Putin’s wrath was Vladimir Gusinsky,
owner of a media empire famous for financing printed and broadcasting
media outlets — among them the popular Ekho Moskvy radio station
and the NTV television channel — often openly critical of Russia’s
authorities and government policies. In May 2000 the headquarters of
Gusinsky’s Media-Most Group were raided by armed and masked federal
agents who identified themselves as officers of the tax police. In June
2000 Gusinsky was arrested on charges of stealing state property valued
at $10 million. After three days of detention he was released under a
travel ban.
Meanwhile, NTV shareholder, the partly state-owned Gazprom
Gazprom sued Media-Most for breach of contract, and the Prosecutor General
In December 2000, Gusinsky was arrested in Spain on an Interpol
warrant filed by Russian prosecutors. He was later released on bail.
Some of his newspapers were shut down, Gazprom became the owner of
several media outlets belonging to Most Group, the NTV board was
replaced, its key staff leaving the channel. In August 2003, Gusinsky
was arrested once again, this time in Greece under a treaty with Russia
but released soon afterwards.
In May, 2004 Vladimir Gusinsky
won a case against the Russian government in the European Court of
Human Rights in Strasbourg, the judges deciding unanimously in favour
of the exiled tycoon, and ruling that Russia’s authorities had violated
Article 5 and 18 (the said articles dealing with freedom and security)
of the European Convention for Human Rights in relation to Gusinsky.
Potanin, et al
In July 2000 another oligarch, the head of the InterRos
Vladimir Potanin
Lukoil Oil Company
Boris Berezovsky: The Fall of the Kremlin’s Grey Cardinal
During
the Yeltsin-era the name of Boris Berezovsky — media, car and
airline tycoon — was virtually synonymous to shady
behind-the-scenes influence and covert power. One of the closest
members of President Yeltsin’s inner-circle, in the mid-1990s
Berezovsky openly entered politics and was appointed secretary of
Russia’s National Security Council and head of the Executive Committee
of the CIS
Communists
Chechen war
On
July 8, 2000, Vladimir Putin announced in his address that Russia would
no longer tolerate ’’shady groups’’ that divert money abroad, establish
their own ’’dubious’’ security services, and block the development of a
liberal market economy. Soon after Berezovsky voiced his plans to
create an opposition party led by regional governors and other
influential figures threatened by Putin’s drive for power. At the end
of the year the prosecution declared Berezovsky the main suspect in the
misappropriation of large sums from Aeroflot — Russia’s national
airline in which he owned large stakes. A similar case against
Berezovsky dealt with large-scale fraud in his Logovaz car company.
Berezovsky
left Russia at the end of 2000. In March 2003, he was arrested in
London but released on bail. In October of the same year he received
political asylum in the United Kingdom. His stake in Russia’s major
television company ORT (now First Channel) was sold, and his own TV6
channel was closed by a ruling of the Russian Arbitration Court. Still
an active critic of President Putin, Boris Berezovsky is now living
under the name of Platon Yelenin.
The Yukos Case
The
latest and most talked-about case of the Kremlin’s fight against the
oligarchs began in July 2003 when one of the major shareholders of
Russia’s oil giant Yukos
Mikhail Khodorkovsky
FSB
Once
in custody, Mikhail Khodorkovsky resigned as Yukos CEO. Several other
core Yukos shareholders, including Khodorkovsky’s close friend and
former rector of the Yukos-sponsored Russian State University for the
Humanities Leonid Nevzlin, left Russia and were placed on the
international wanted list by Russia’s Prosecutor General’s Office. The
“Yukos case” received wide publicity and was denounced by various human
rights groups as being politically motivated.
In March 2004
Mikhail Khodorkovsky’s open letter titled The Crisis of Liberalism in
Russia was published by Russian business daily Vedomosti. In it
Khodorkovsky called on Russia’s top businessmen to face up to the fact
that most major privatizations in the country were conducted with a
disregard for the interests of its people and to ’’recognize the
legitimacy of President Vladimir Putin“. Khodorkovsky later stated that
the letter was in fact a result of a ”collective authorship“ but that
he agreed with its content and admitted responsibility as the person
who agreed to put his name under it. Soon afterwards Leonid Nevzlin,
now living in Israel, announced his withdrawal from politics and the
end of his funding of the liberal opposition in Russia, namely Irina Khakamada
After
an appeal from Platon Lebedev’s lawyers, the criminal cases of
Khodorkovsky and Lebedev were joined into one, with the two Yukos
shareholders currently awaiting trial, set for July 12, 2004.
Updated: 23.09.2005 21:36 MSK
07.03.2005 13:53 MSK, MOSNEWS.COM
28.01.2005 14:01 MSK, MOSNEWS.COM
26.01.2005 11:19 MSK, MOSNEWS.COM
12.01.2005 15:46 MSK, MOSNEWS.COM
20.12.2004 22:27 MSK, MOSNEWS.COM
08.12.2004 15:20 MSK, MOSNEWS.COM
07.12.2004 18:28 MSK, MOSNEWS.COM
30.11.2004 16:47 MSK, MOSNEWS.COM
25.11.2004 15:33 MSK, MOSNEWS.COM
23.11.2004 14:11 MSK, MOSNEWS.COM
19.11.2004 14:43 MSK, MOSNEWS.COM
17.11.2004 17:01 MSK, MOSNEWS.COM
28.07.2004 10:00 MSK, MOSNEWS.COM
02.07.2004 11:20 MSK, MOSNEWS.COM
19.05.2004 17:35 MSK, MOSNEWS.COM
19.05.2004 17:08 MSK, MOSNEWS.COM
MosNews
Russian police have detained two Chechens over suspicion of carrying out a hit on famous reporter and HR activist Anna Politkovskaya, a Russian newspaper reports.
MosNews
British Trade Secretary Alistair Darling warned Russia on Thursday, Feb. 8, that it should “play by the rules” and ensure “legal certainty” for British investors. Darling spoke at the end of his three-day visit to Moscow.
ITAMAR AICHNER, NATASHA MOZGOVAYA
Yedioth Ahronoth
Moscow has continuously denied four Israeli nationals convicted in Russia permission to serve their terms at home unless Israel extradites Jewish Russian-born entrepreneur Leonid Nevzlin, once the second-in-command of Yukos and business partner of the jailed Russian tycoon Mikhail Khodorkovsky, Yedioth Ahronoth reports.
MosNews
In an interview with the Russia Today television the two men at the centre of British accusations over the murder of former Russian security agent Aleksandr Litvinenko have denied the claims they were suspects in the case.
DELIYA MEYLANOVA
MosNews
The �2008 question� increasingly being put to Vladimir Putin is important not only for because it will decide who will lead Russia until 2012, but also because of its symbolic significance. Will the constitution be changed?
SERGEI KARAGANOV
Rossiyskaya Gazeta
Despite isolated tactical victories in fight against terrorism, the West has failed to learn the lessons of September 11, Russian pundit Sergei Karaganov is convinced.
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