Posts Tagged ‘interfax’

14
September 2012

Judge declines to return Kratov case to prosecutors, change charge to murder

Interfax

The Moscow Tverskoi District Court has once again declined to return to prosecutors the case of former Butyrka detention center deputy warden Dmitry Kratov charged with negligence in connection with the death of Hermitage Capital Foundation lawyer Sergei Magnitsky.

The Magnitsky family lawyer asked the court to return the Kratov case to prosecutors and to charge him with murder and infliction of moral and physical suffering.

“New circumstances have become known: Kratov’s actions lead to the death of Magnitsky,” lawyer Nikolai Gorokhov claimed.

The prosecutors and the defense of the ex-Butyrka deputy warden raised objections.

“We are even unable to start a juridical inquiry; how can the judge evaluate the case?” the Kratov’s lawyer wondered.

Presiding Judge Tatiana Neverova rejected the appeal of the Magnitsky family defense. payday loan срочный займ на карту https://www.zp-pdl.com zp-pdl.com payday loan

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03
September 2012

60 Russians banned from entering UK over Magnitsky case

The Voice of Russia

British Home Secretary Theresa May has sent a list o f 60 Russian citizens barred from entering Great Britain in connection with the Magnitsky case, London’s Sunday Times newspaper reported.
On the ‘blacklist’ are judges, police officers and the prosecutor’s office.

Minister for Immigration Damian Green reported about the details of the blacklist in a letter to a British parliament member. In the letter, the minister said the list of 60 officials compiled by the U.S. Congress committee was sent to the British embassy in Moscow. It will be applied when U.K. visa appliations are considered, Green noted.

The British embassy in Moscow gives no comments so far on the information.
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17
July 2012

Magnistkiy’s mother demands explanations about senators’ US visit

Interfax

The mother of Hermitage Capital legal consultant Sergey Magnitskiy, who died in pre-trial detention in Moscow, has accused Federation Council members who visited Washington last week of defaming her son.

According to a Hermitage Capital press release received by Interfax on Monday [16 June], Natalya Magnitskaya has written an open letter to Federation Council chairwoman Valentina Matviyenko “demanding an objective assessment of the defamation campaign against the slain lawyer, executed by four Russian senators last week in Washington who were trying to stop the adoption of the Magnitskiy law by US Congress where the bill will be discussed this Wednesday, 18 July, at the Senate finance committee”.

“I believe that this attempt to posthumously besmirch the good name of my son looks shameful and is not worthy of the high title of a people’s representative. Abusing their status, these people permitted themselves to insult the memory of my son. They used the fact that my son is not able to defend himself,” the fund’s press service quoted the text of the letter as saying.

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13
July 2012

Senator denies Russian report on Magnitskiy case based on official inquiry

Interfax

There has been no parliamentary investigation of the Magnitskiy [Magnitsky] case in Russia, head of the Federation Council International Affairs Committee Mikhail Margelov has told Interfax.

“Although there has been no special parliamentary investigation of the Magnitskiy case, this does not mean that any Russian senator cannot have his point of view based on the study of documents,” Margelov said, commenting on information in the media about a report which was presented to the US side by a group of members of the Federation Council in Washington.

According to Margelov, the delegation members had requested the necessary documents in the relevant departments and held series of meetings with their leaders and experts.

“This is a common practice of preparing such meetings, so the note which was passed to the US side reflects the Russian theory of the case. To avoid broad interpretation, the document is called ‘The results of a preliminary parliamentary investigation’, not a parliamentary investigation in the usual sense,” Margelov told the agency.

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27
June 2012

Alekseyeva hopes Europe will follow example of U.S. with “Magnitsky law”

Interfax

Russian human rights activists have backed the decision made by the U.S. Senate Committee on International Affairs to approve the “Magnitsky bill,” which envisions visa and financial restrictions on some Russian officials.

“It’s a very good decision. I hope some European countries will follow the example of the U.S.,” Moscow Helsinki Group Chairman Lyudmila Alekseyeva told Interfax on Wednesday.

Alekseyeva said no real investigation into the death in a Moscow detention facility of Hermitage Capital lawyer Sergei Magnitsky has been conducted in Russia. She said the decision made by the U.S. Senate committee is a signal from the international community to the Russian authorities.

“I believe it’s an international verdict,” Alekseyeva said.

Alekseyeva said she does not believe measures taken by Russia in response will be effective.

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19
June 2012

U.S. clergy back Magnitsky bill

Interfax

U.S. religious figures have supported the so-called Magnitsky bill imposing visa and financial restrictions on a number of Russian officials, which is due to be debated in the U.S. Congress on Tuesday, Hermitage Capital said.

The letter sent to the Congress by nine religious organizations says that the passage of this bill will help prevent repressions against fighters for religious freedom, the company spokesperson told Interfax on Monday.

According to the letter, the possibility to visit to the United States is a privilege, and foreign officials involved in abuse, murders, restriction of religious freedoms and trampling on other people’s rights, must be deprived of this privilege, the spokesperson said.

The authors hope the sacrifice made by Sergei Magnitsky will not be in vain and will lead to a new important tool in fighting against the trampling on human rights globally, the Hermitage spokesman said.

The document was signed by religious groups representing various faiths, including the United Macedonian Diaspora, the International Religious Liberty Association, the American Islamic Congress, the Hindu American Foundation of Hindus, the Union of Councils for Soviet Jews and the Human Rights Law Foundation, he said.

Earlier, the U.S. Senate Committee on International Relations announced its decision to consider on June 19 the Magnitsky bill, which could impose visa and financial restrictions against a number of Russian officials. The bill is already among the documents due to be voted upon on June 19, the committee told Interfax. быстрые займы на карту hairy girl www.zp-pdl.com https://zp-pdl.com buy over the counter medicines

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08
June 2012

U.S. Magnitsky law will be beneficial – rights activist Ponomaryov

Interfax

Veteran of the Russian human rights movement and For Human Rights group leader Lev Ponomaryov has welcomed the decision by the United States House of Representatives to approve the Magnitsky bill, which could impose visa and financial sanctions against Russian officials.

“It is a concrete signal and I think it will be of benefit to Russia,” Ponomaryov told Interfax on Thursday.

There was no genuine inquiry into the death of Hermitage Capital lawyer Sergei Magnitsky, and the Russian officials and law enforcers responsible for his death have not been punished, he said.

“The Russian public demanded an answer from the authorities. No one answered to us. On the other hand, all the circumstances surrounding Magnitsky’s death indicate that he was killed. Just as during the Soviet period, there is some impulse coming from the West,” Ponomaryov said.

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07
June 2012

Hermitage Capital hopes U.S. Magnitsky bill will fuel similar moves in other countries

Interfax

A spokesman for British investment fund Hermitage Capital expressed confidence that Thursday’s preliminary approval in the U.S. Congress of a planned law to slap visa and financial sanctions on Russian officials blamed for Sergei Magnitsky’s death would be an impulse to similar legislative measures in other countries.

The Justice for Sergei Magnitsky bill was endorsed by the Committee on Foreign Affairs of the U.S. House of Representatives.

“The serious support for the Magnitsky draft law by the American lawmakers will undoubtedly give a new impulse to similar legislative initiatives that are under consideration today in other countries, including European Union countries,” the Hermitage spokesman told Interfax.

“The passage of the Magnitsky bill will be a catalyst in Russia’s further movement toward democracy and will seriously curb lawlessness on the part of officials and corruption,” he said.

“Officials will no longer be able to keep abroad what they have stolen, they will be unable to get their children enrolled in prestigious foreign universities,” the spokesman said. The Justice for Magnitsky Act “will also support those who today take to the streets to protest lawlessness on the part of law enforcement and judicial bodies.” hairy girl займы на карту срочно https://zp-pdl.com/apply-for-payday-loan-online.php https://zp-pdl.com/best-payday-loans.php buy viagra online

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18
May 2012

Presidential Human Rights Council dissatisfied with Magnitsky case investigation

Interfax

The Presidential Human Rights Council is dissatisfied with the tempo of the investigation into the death of Hermitage Capital attorney Sergei Magnitsky at a Moscow detention ward.

Human rights activists are no longer invited to witness investigative procedures in the Magnitsky case, Council member, head of the National Anti-Corruption Committee public organization Kirill Kabanov said at the Council’s meeting in Moscow on Thursday.

“The Investigative Committee has assigned a new detective to the case. The new detective is not cooperative with human rights activists and the Presidential Council; that is the right he has by the Criminal Procedure Code,” he said.

A short time ago the Presidential Council’s working group believed that some progress had been made in the Magnitsky case, he said.

“We started to interact with the detectives. For the first time ever an Investigative Committee detective invited human rights activists to witness investigative procedures and asked their opinion about particular episodes,” Kabanov said.

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