Posts Tagged ‘browder’

01
December 2011

ECFR Black Coffee Morning – ‘Dealing with a post-BRIC Russia’

European Council on Foreign Relations

With Nicu Popescu, Senior Policy Fellow, ECFR, William Browder, CEO, Hermitage Capital Management and chaired by Edward Lucas, International Editor, The Economist

Wednesday 7th December, 8.30-9.30 am (registration from 8.15 am)
Venue: ECFR office, 3rd Floor Conference Room, 35 Old Queen Street, London SW1H 9JA

Dear Colleague,

The European Council on Foreign Relations is delighted to invite you to an invitation-only discussion entitled ‘Dealing with a Post-BRIC Russia’ with Nicu Popescu, senior policy fellow at ECFR, William Browder, CEO, Hermitage Capital Management and chaired by Edward Lucas, international editor, The Economist. The meeting will take place on Wednesday 7th December between 8:30 and 9:30 am at ECFR’s office in Westminster.

Vladimir Putin will return to the Presidency but to a different Russia. The global economic crisis has shattered Russia’s dream of being a BRIC that is on a par with China, India and Brazil. Russia no longer has the optimism of a rising power. Instead it has the pessimism of the West and few in Moscow have illusions about resurgence and many fear stagnation and “Brezhnevization”. In short, Russia is now post-BRIC. This has caused a foreign policy re-think in Moscow. Russia has streamlined its approach in the post-Soviet space, is increasingly nervous of China and has “reset” relations with the US. Yet paradoxically, the European Union now treats Russia more like a BRIC than it did before 2008 – having abandoned hopes to see Russia as a “big Poland” that can be slowly democratised through conditionality, it is reconciled to treating its biggest neighbour like “a small China” with which you do business and little else. How can a weakened EU react to Putin’s return to a post-BRIC Russia?

Nicu Popescu is a senior policy fellow and head of ECFR’s programme on Russia and Wider Europe. In 2010-2011 Nicu served as advisor on foreign policy and European integration to the Prime-Minister of Moldova where he dealt with a wide range of issues related to EU-Moldova relations. He has recently published a book entitled EU foreign policy and the post-Soviet conflicts: Stealth Intervention.

William Browder is the Founder and CEO of Hermitage Capital Management, the largest foreign investor in Russia until November 2005, when he was suddenly denied entry to the country and declared “a threat to national security”. Since the death of Sergei Magnitsky, Mr Browder’s lawyer, he has been leading a worldwide campaign to expose the corruption, rule of law and human rights abuses committed by Russian government officials. Through his advocacy campaign, a law was introduced in the United States Congress entitled the “Sergei Magnitsky Rule of Law Accountability Act of 2011” that would impose visa entry bans and asset freezes on Russian officials who commit human rights abuses as well as on those who cover up corruption.

Edward Lucas is the international editor of The Economist and has been a specialist in the countries of central and eastern Europe for more than 25 years with postings including Berlin, Moscow, Prague and Vienna. In the early 1990s he was the major shareholder of The Baltic Independent, an English-language weekly in the Baltic states. He is the author of The New Cold War: Putin’s Russia and the Threat to the West (2008) and of a forthcoming book on east-west espionage.

We very much hope to welcome you to this event. Places are limited, and will be allocated on a first come first served basis. Coffee and tea will be served from 8.15 am. Please confirm your participation as soon as possible by email to london@ecfr.eu.  For more information about the work of the European Council on Foreign Relations please visit www.ecfr.eu.

Mark Leonard
Director
European Council on Foreign Relations
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30
November 2011

Barred Reporter Says RusAl Behind Visa Loss

The Moscow Times

An Australian-American journalist and self-declared doyen of the country’s foreign press corps has been barred entry into Russia in what he says is revenge from Oleg Deripaska’s RusAl for his “aggressive reporting” on the aluminum giant.

John Helmer, who had lived in Moscow since 1989 and briefly worked as a Moscow Times reporter in the early 1990s, said RusAl has hounded him for two years because he rejected an offer for cash payments in exchange for favorable articles.

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28
November 2011

Report: Lawyer Beaten to Death

The Moscow Times

New evidence released Monday added weight to suspicions that Hermitage Capital lawyer Sergei Magnitsky was beaten to death by prison guards in 2009 and did not die from health problems as previously claimed by the authorities.

A report by Hermitage Capital, once Russia’s largest foreign investment fund, found that the 37-year-old lawyer was left to die on a cell floor after suffering a brain trauma in the beating apparently ordered by prison officials.

The report, which runs at 75 pages in English and 100 pages in Russian, offers gruesome photos from the morgue that depict bad bruises on what it says are Magnitsky’s wrists and legs.

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28
November 2011

Report claims coverup in Russian lawyer’s death

Associated Press

A government probe into the death in prison of a Russian lawyer who exposed official corruption covered up a brutal beating he received in prison and the deliberate denial of medical treatment, a new report claimed Monday.

Sergei Magnitsky, who was arrested after accusing officials of corruption, died in November 2009 after the pancreatitis he developed in prison went untreated. Two prison doctors have been charged with negligence.

The 37-year-old had been arrested by the same Interior Ministry officials whom he had accused of using false tax papers to steal $230 million from the state.

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28
November 2011

Berlin Exhibit Explores Magnitsky Case

New York Times

A permanent exhibition at the Checkpoint Charlie Museum (Friedrichstrasse 43-45; mauermuseum.de) in Berlin exposes a modern-day saga of governmental corruption, coercion and torture. The Sergei Magnitsky case revealed egregious abuses of power that continue to plague Putin’s Russia and which ultimately led to the tragic demise of the 37-year-old tax attorney Magnitsky, while he was held captive in a maximum security Russian prison.

His crime? Uncovering a vast conspiracy that sought to rob the Russian state and its citizens of millions of dollars in fraudulent tax refunds, allegedly executed by police officers and governmental officials.

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28
November 2011

Russian lawyer beaten on day of jail death: supporters

AFP

A Western investment fund whose attorney died in a Moscow jail published documents Monday alleging to show prison officials authorised the use of rubber batons on the day of his death.

The case of Sergei Magnitsky — a whistle-blowing lawyer who alleged mass embezzlement by the tax police — has been highlighted by the West as one of the most flagrant abuses of human rights in Russia in recent years.

The 37-year-old’s death also raised alarm over the Russian justice system’s impartiality and the ability of the police to manipulate the courts.

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28
November 2011

Seeking guilty in Russian whistleblower’s death

The Washington Post

If the legal system here worked, a 75-page report titled “The Torture and Murder of Sergei Magnitsky and the Coverup by the Russian Government” would be submitted to a court of law. Instead, it is being delivered Monday to the court of international opinion.

The report, full of links to official documents and the result of a thousand man-hours of work, comes not from officers of the law but an American-born businessman who is convinced that Russian officials are getting away with murder.

William F. Browder, who runs an investment firm based in London, has taken on the role of virtual prosecutor in the death of Sergei L. Magnitsky, who died at the age of 37 in police custody because of his work as a tax adviser to Browder’s Hermitage Capital Management when it operated in Russia.

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24
November 2011

Investigation against Russian lawyer who died in jail extended despite his family’s pleas

The Washington Post

Russian investigators on Thursday declined to close a probe against a Russian lawyer who died in jail of an untreated illness, extending the investigation by another two months despite his family’s pleas to end it.

Sergei Magnitsky died of an untreated pancreatitis in November 2009 after spending almost a year in a Moscow jail on tax evasion charges. Investors working in Russia have said the lawyer’s death and allegations of torture highlight corruption in the judicial system and presents a litmus test for President Dmitry Medvedev’s pledge to cement the rule of law in the country.

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23
November 2011

Sergei Magnitsky’s mother vows to continue fight for justice in Russia

The Guardian

Two years after the Russian whistleblower died in custody, Natalia Magnitskaya says many people were behind his death.

Natalia Magnitskaya speaks in whispers, her tired eyes looking down at fingers that twist and turn from anxiety. She barely slept last night, as with most nights in the two years since her son died within the walls of one of Russia’s most notorious prisons.

Sergei Magnitsky was 37 when he died in November 2009 of multiple ailments he developed after being arrested a year earlier. The charges against him, of fraud and tax evasion, were designed to pressure the young lawyer into backing off on an investigation into an alleged attempt by corrupt state officials to steal $230m (£143m) in fake tax refunds, his supporters say.

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