Posts Tagged ‘french’

24
November 2011

France Enters Magnitsky Fray

The Moscow Times

France has become the latest Western country to publicly criticize Russia’s investigation into the death of Hermitage Capital lawyer Sergei Magnitsky in pretrial detention in 2009.

“The circumstances of the death of Mr. Magnitsky, who led a courageous fight against corruption and arbitrariness, are a matter of great concern for us,” Foreign Minister Alain Juppe wrote in a letter to French National Assembly Deputy Jack Lang.

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26
October 2011

Russia – Death of Sergei Magnitsky (October 25, 2011)

France Diplomatie

France is very attentively monitoring the investigation conducted by the Russian authorities to clarify the circumstances of Sergei Magnitsky’s death.

Please remember that following the July 2011 report by the “Council for Human Rights and Development of Civil Society,” which reports to the President of the Russian Federation, judicial proceedings were undertaken against several doctors in the Russian prison administration for not providing the necessary medical help to Sergei Magnitsky.

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02
September 2011

Sergei Magnitsky, the death that shakes the Kremlin

Le Nouvel Observateur

(Translation from Original French text)

While Russian police recently raided the headquarters of BP in Moscow that Putin seems to have decided to become president of the country, here is the article I published last week in the “Nouvel Observateur” on d ‘a case that caused a stir in Russia.

It was a Muscovite like millions of others. Yet his death – heroic – will perhaps change the course of relations between Russia and the world. Sergei Magnitsky was a modest jurist who, unfortunately for him, discovered the huge embezzlement organized by a group of leading Russian officials. To silence him, he was thrown into prison, where for a year, he was tortured and denied care. He did not give. Despite excruciating pain, he refused to withdraw his testimony against the top brass. And November 16, 2009, it was left to die alone in a filthy cell.

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