Boris Berezovsky and the Russian Money Problem
Boris Berezovsky, once one of the richest men in Russia, was found dead last Saturday at his house in Ascot, a wealthy little English town near Windsor Castle.
Everything about the death suggests suicide. Berezovsky’s body was found inside a locked bathroom. An inquest has found no signs of violence on his body. The ligature around his neck corresponded to a fragment of ligature still attached to the shower curtain.
The 67-year-old Berezovsky had suffered financially from his prolonged conflict with Vladimir Putin’s Kremlin. In the past three years, he appears to have lost the remainder of his fortune. In 2011, a British court had ordered him to pay a huge settlement — rumored at 100-million pounds — to one of his ex-wives. Only last year he had been ordered to pay costs of 35-million pounds after losing a lawsuit against another Russian tycoon. He was reported to have sold artworks and houses to raise cash. Friends described him as “depressed.”
On the other hand … sudden death seems to have become contagious among Putin’s critics. Berezovsky had been friends with Alexander Litvinenko, the ex-spy who died of radiation poisoning in the United Kingdom in 2006 after somehow ingesting a dose of deadly polonium. In 2008, Berezovsky’s 52-year-old former business partner, Badri Patarkatsishvili, dropped dead at his home in Surrey, apparently of cardiac arrest. Well, he was a smoker.
The deaths of these ex-oligarchs will loose few tears. The friends and family of the American journalist Paul Klebnikov — murdered in Moscow in 2004 — suspect Berezovsky of ordering the hit. Berezovsky and Patarkatsishvili gained their fortunes by seizing assets of the former Soviet state in the disorder after the collapse of communism in the early 1990s.
But the second wave of oligarchs brought to wealth and power by their alliance with Vladimir Putin hardly constitute a moral improvement over the first. They are plundering the Russian state, too, this time in alliance with the former KGB — the spy agency Putin headed and whose leading members have become billionaires alongside him.
Sudden death seems to have become contagious among Putin’s critics
The second wave of Russian oligarchy is different from the first in another way, too. Thanks to the rise in oil prices since 2005, they together are much richer — and thus much more of a problem for the rest of the world.
It’s Russian money — both that of the ultra-rich and that of the next level down — that flooded into Cyprus in recent years. It’s generally estimated that 40% of the bank deposits in Cyprus belong to Russians, who domicile their accounts in Cyprus to avoid tax at home. These arrangements have created the appearance that an island with an economy the size of Vermont’s has become the single largest foreign investor in Russia.
The Russian deposits enabled Cyprus’ bankers to take risks that ended in insolvency — and presented the rest of Europe with a dilemma: bail out rich Russians with EU taxpayer euros or else invite bank runs in every other weak economy in the Eurozone.
The looting of Russia has changed the financial balance of power in Europe. If many wealthy Russians make their homes in England, it’s not because they enjoy the weather. Here’s what Forbes magazine reported in 2005: “Between 1998 and 2004, $102-billion in capital left Russia, according to Hermitage Capital. Much of it went to offshore accounts in Switzerland and elsewhere. From there it is impossible to trace, but tax lawyers say the U.K. offers unique tax advantages to people with assets offshore … a Russian billionaire can hold stock offshore, sell it and use the proceeds to buy a London mansion — all without paying taxes on the gain.”
And where Russian wealth goes, the Russian secret services follow. After the expulsion of a Russian spy from the U.K. in 2011, the Telegraph reported that MI5 believed Russia to employ between 30 and 50 spies out of its London embassy.
The Berezovsky death may well be nothing more than a desperate man’s sad end. The Cyprus bank crisis may be contained. But the spoil from the looting of Russia has piled too high to be contained within Russia’s own borders, and these recent stories should make Russia’s neighbours look and think twice, and then look and think again. займ срочно без отказов и проверок hairy girl https://zp-pdl.com/best-payday-loans.php https://zp-pdl.com/apply-for-payday-loan-online.php займы без отказа
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To learn more about what happened to Sergei Magnitsky please read below
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- Why was Sergei Magnitsky arrested?
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- President’s investigation sabotaged and going nowhere
- The corrupt officers attempt to arrest 8 lawyers
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- Petitions requesting a real investigation into Magnitsky's death
- Worldwide reaction, calls to punish those responsible for corruption and murder
- Complaints against Lt.Col. Kuznetsov
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- Cover up
- Press about Magnitsky
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