Posts Tagged ‘gudkov’

03
April 2013

The New Russian Mob

New York Times

I realize this is a somewhat irresponsible thought, but I keep wondering why anyone should care if some Russian oligarchs and businesses — and corrupt officials — lose a bundle in Cyprus.

Yes, I know, the European Union’s original, ham-handed proposal — a tax on every bank deposit in Cyprus — was potentially destabilizing to the world’s financial system. It raised the specter of bank runs not just in Cyprus but all over Europe. It served as a jolting reminder that the European crisis is still with us. Yada, yada.

But it also turns out that much of the hot money held in the Cypriot banking system is Russian. Russian companies like the low taxes that come with having entities in Cyprus. Because of the wink, wink, nod, nod relationship between Cyprus and Russia, rubles deposited in Cypriot banks are as untraceable as dollars once were in Swiss bank accounts, according to Dmitry Gudkov, an opposition politician (about whom more in a moment). Corrupt officials who embezzle money have long found Cyprus to be a friendly haven. Bloomberg Businessweek reported earlier this week that a substantial amount of the $230 million fraud perpetrated in 2007 against Hermitage Capital — a crime unearthed by Sergei Magnitsky, the brave lawyer who died in prison after he exposed the fraud — can be traced to Cyprus.

To put it another way, the henchmen of Russia’s president, Vladimir Putin, who have gotten rich by trampling over the rule of law, are now getting a taste of their own medicine. In Cyprus, with no warning, the rules changed, and deposits larger than 100,000 euros may now face “haircuts” of as much as 40 percent. Though the purpose of the tax is to save the country’s banking system, the outcome is the same as when Russian officials create phony tax charges to steal a businessman’s assets. People feel they are being robbed. And they become extremely upset.

The funniest part is that according to Reuters, some Russian entities are threatening to sue. Actually, that makes a certain perverse sense: one of the reasons Russian bureaucrats are so quick to move their newly stolen wealth out of Russia is that they want it in a place where the rule of law actually has some meaning. They don’t want done to them what they’ve done to their fellow citizens.

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14
September 2012

European deputies pass resolution on political use of justice in Russia

ITAR TASS

The European Parliament on Thursday passed a resolution on political use of justice in Russia. The European deputies believe that plans to unseat deputy Gennady Gudkov from “A Just Russia” party is an attempt to put up barriers to legitimate activities of an opposition member.

The European Union’s top legislative body voted for the resolution in the run-up to a Russian State Duma hearing on stripping Gudkov of his parliamentary mandate scheduled for September 14.

The resolution notes that the human rights situation in Russia has radically deteriorated over the past few months. Instead of resolute steps to protect the basic rights and freedoms, Russia has taken a number of measures aimed at curtailing these rights, the resolution’s authors say.

Catherine Ashton, the EU High Representative for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy, said earlier in Strasbourg that possible unseating of opposition deputy Gennady Gudkov, lack of progress in investigation into the death of Sergei Magnitsky, an auditor of Britain’s Hermitage Capital Management Fund and the sentence passed on the Pussy Riot punk group signaled a trend that was a source of concern for the European Union. займы на карту без отказа займы онлайн на карту срочно www.zp-pdl.com www.zp-pdl.com займ на карту

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09
December 2011

The Decembrists

Foreign Policy

No one’s quite sure what’s going on in the streets of Moscow — or what to call it — but it’s growing and powerful … and could all end badly.

Tonight is the first night without protests here since some 6,000 young people gathered Monday night to express their frustration with the electoral fraud in Sunday’s parliamentary elections and, more broadly, the institution of Putinism. They came out again Tuesday night, where they were met by thousands of drum-beating pro-Kremlin youth activists. And again on Wednesday. Nearly 1,000 people were arrested, and many of them — including anti-corruption blogger Alexey Navalny, a political rising star since he coined the phrase “Party of Crooks and Thieves” to describe Vladimir Putin’s ruling United Russia — are still in jail. Moscow is filled with tens of thousands of extra Interior Ministry troops and armored personnel carriers, and the city’s skies crackle with the sound of helicopter blades.

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