31
August 2011

Great Britain might introduce sanctions against the Russians on the Magnitsky List

WPS: What the Papers Say

MacShane said, “Magnitsky’s death was gruesome but nobody has ever been brought to answer for it even though identities of these people are known. Hermitage Capital is a British company. Its head William Browder is a citizen of Great Britain. The authorities of Great Britain cannot remain a disinterested observer.”

“Since Moscow is clearly unwilling to prosecute the people whose decisions and actions resulted in the death of an innocent, it becomes our duty. Putin and Medvedev ought to be reminded that the days of Josef Stalin are over and impunity with them. The United States has made its contribution. It’s our turn now.”

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30
August 2011

British MP Urges Russia Visa Restrictions Over Magnitsky Case

Radio Free Europe

British Member of Parliament (MP) Denis MacShane has called on the British government to place visa restrictions on Russian officials accused of involvement in the death of Sergei Magnitsky, a Russian lawyer who died in prison in 2009.

“What the United States government has done is to list 60 Russian officials who are named in connection with Mr. Magnitsky’s death and I’m urging the British prime minister, as our other British MPs, to do the same thing,” MacShane told RFE/RL’s Russian Service.

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30
August 2011

Remember Sergei Magnitsky

The Post and Courier

Who’s really running Russia? The smart money has been on Vladimir Putin, and the case of Sergei Magnitsky appears to underscore that conclusion. How the Magnitsky case is resolved will reveal the extent of Mr. Putin’s reach, even though Dmitry Medvedev serves as president.

Mr. Magnitsky was arrested by Russia’s Interior Ministry in 2008 shortly after he declared that he had evidence of police corruption and embezzlement at the ministry. The complaint said he had helped a client, American-owned investment firm Hermitage Capital, evade taxes. He died after 11 months in prison.

Now Russia has indicted two doctors for his death in a case that exudes the smell of a cover-up. It has strained U.S.-Russian relations and tested the relative powers of President Medvedev, an advocate of the rule of law, and Prime Minister Vladimir Putin.

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30
August 2011

Family opposed to re-opening Magnitsky tax evasion case

Interfax

Relatives of Hermitage Capital lawyer Sergei Magnitsky, who died in a Moscow jail in November 2009, disagree with the resumption of a criminal investigation against him based on tax evasion charges.

Magnitsky’s family dismissed this decision as inhuman, lawyers representing Magnitsky’s wife said in a statement obtained by Interfax.

“The right to rehabilitate a deceased person belongs exclusively to his close relatives. That is why they retain the right to make a decision about the resumption of an investigation with the aim of rehabilitating him in the future, if they deem it necessary,” the document says. займ на карту срочно без отказа buy over the counter medicines female wrestling https://zp-pdl.com/how-to-get-fast-payday-loan-online.php https://www.zp-pdl.com займ на карту онлайн

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26
August 2011

Russia: Magnitskiy family slams “inhumane” reopening of tax evasion case

Interfax

The relatives of Hermitage Capital lawyer Sergey Magnitskiy, who died in pre-trial detention, are against the investigation into his [alleged] tax evasion being reopened.

According to a statement given by the lawyer for Magnitskiy’s wife, which was obtained by the Interfax news agency, the relatives consider it inhumane to pursue an investigation with respect to a deceased person.

“The right of close relatives to exoneration of the deceased is their exclusive right. This is why they maintain this right going forward, [to be able] to decide to reopen an investigation for the purpose of exoneration at their own discretion,” the document says.

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24
August 2011

Russian rights activists want list of suspects of lawyer’s death to be extended

Interfax

Excerpt from report by corporate-owned Russian news agency Interfax

Moscow, 24 August: Human rights activists hope that investigators will manage to identify all those guilty of Hermitage Capital fund lawyer Sergey Magnitskiy’s death in a Moscow remand centre.

The Investigations Committee extended the term of the investigation of the criminal case of Magnitskiy’s death until 24 November.

“We would like to hope that the extension of the probe will be justified in terms of bringing to justice all those guilty [of the incident],” Tatyana Lokshina, deputy head of the Moscow office of Human Rights Watch, has told Interfax news agency.

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23
August 2011

Don’t Let Russia Use Iran as a Bargaining Chip

American Enterprise Institue

Several events in recent days indicate deepening ties between Iran and Russia. Last Monday, Russian Security Council chief Nikolai Patrushev paid an official two-day visit to Iran. Patrushev predictably held talks with Iran’s Supreme National Security Council head Saeed Jalili. In an effort to highlight warming relations between the two countries, he also met with President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and Foreign Minister Ali Akbar Salehi. The next day Salehi traveled to Moscow at the invitation of his Russian counterpart.

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22
August 2011

This Hedge Fund Manager Is Up 5% And He’s Been Fighting Corrupt Russians

Business Insider

Hemitage Capital’s chief executive, hedge fund manager Bill Browder, is up 5% YTD and he’s doing it while fighting corrupt Russians.

Browder’s $1 billion hedge fund made most of its money investing in Russian companies — until he had a falling out with authorities. Now Browder is not allowed in the country.

He was banned from entering Russia, “blacklisted” and named a “threat to national security,” after accusing Russian tax officials of corruption and embezzlement in 2006, according to a report in The Economist.

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22
August 2011

Justice sought over Russian lawyer’s death; Browder urges UK ban on culprits

Express on Sunday

Financier Bill Browder is determined to see justice done for his murdered Russian lawyer, Sergei Magnitsky. A year and a half after Magnitsky’s torture and death in a Russian jail, Browder’s ceaseless campaigning has prompted Washington to ban up to 60 Russian officials implicated in the crime from entering the US.

Now Browder, an American-born British citizen, wants the UK to implement a similar visa ban on the officials. He said yesterday: “It’s time for my country to do the same thing.”

Next month, he will ramp up the pressure on the Government to take action ahead of Prime Minister David Cameron’s visit to Russia.

But his mission will not stop there: he wants to stop similar tragedies happening again in Russia. “Sergei’s death is a chance to change Russia in some fundamental way,” he said.

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