Posts Tagged ‘khodorkovsky’

12
January 2011

The European Parliament Considers Sanctions against Russia for Khodorkovsky

Moskovsky Komsomolets

The idea of sanctions was suggested by a group of parliamentarians headed by Kristina Ojuland of Estonia. “The European Union openly supported Belarussian opposition. Why not the democratic opposition in Russia as well?” said Heidi Hautala of Finland, chair-in-office of the European Parliament’s subcommittee on human rights. “We cannot permit double standards.” President of the European Parliament Jerzy Buzek called Khodorkovsky’s verdict a “symbol of systemic problems with supremacy of the law, legal nihilism, and human rights in Russia.”

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11
January 2011

Russian MPs chide EU officials for urging sanctions over Yukos verdict

RIA Novosti

Russian parliament members have criticized European Parliament representatives for proposing visa sanctions against Russian officials involved in the 30 December 2010 sentencing, in a second trial, of former Yukos oil company head Mikhail Khodorkovskiy and his business associate Platon Lebedev. Their reaction was reported by Russian media on 11 January.

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11
January 2011

Russian Officials Associated with Khodorkovsky’s verdict face Prospect of Sanctions

Kommersant

The latest verdict to Mikhail Khodorkovsky and Platon Lebedev became one of the central items on the agenda of the first meeting of the EU Subcommittee on Human Rights. In fact, all key statements had been made throughout the West even before the meeting of the structure. President of the European Parliament Jerzy Buzek called the verdict a “symbol of systematic problems of the judiciary, legal nihilism, and human rights abuses in Russia.” Catherine Ashton, High Representative of the Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy, called it a “disappointment and a cause for concern.”

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06
January 2011

The End of the Medvedev Revolution?

The New York Review of Books

Since a Russian judge sentenced former Yukos oil executive Mikhail Khodorkovsky and his business partner, Platon Lebedev, to thirteen and a half years in prison on December 30, many commentators have viewed the outcome—after a 22-month trial that openly flouted judicial standards—as a major setback for Russian President Dmitry Medvedev. After all, a little more than a year ago, Medvedev gained international attention for vowing to institute the rule of law in Russia and make foreign investment in Russia a top priority, and there had been growing speculation that he might begin to take on the entrenched interests of Prime Minister Vladimir Putin. For the moment, those hopes seem dashed. In the long run, however, the case against Khodorkovsky and Lebedev may hurt Putin more than Medvedev as the two rivals position themselves for the 2012 presidential contest.

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04
January 2011

On Human Rights in the World and the EU’s Policy on the Matter

New Europe

Human rights serve as the guiding principle in the European Union’s (EU’s) external action. Hardly are there other state-actors in the world that would place such an emphasis on the spread and protection of human rights abroad.

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04
January 2011

The Verdict Is In

Foreign Policy

The re-sentencing of Russia’s No.1 dissident, Mikhail Khodorkovsky, wasn’t unexpected, but the sheer brazenness of it is a striking and dangerous sign of bad things to come. There is one word that comes to mind when watching the drama surrounding the Mikhail Khodorkovsky verdict and sentence today of 13.5 years in prison. Perhaps tellingly, it is a Russian word: naglost’. English simply doesn’t have one word that packs into so few letters all that naglost’ means: arrogance, contemptuous malice, obnoxiousness, brazenness, insolence, impudence, and sheer nerve. Google Translate suggests no fewer than 22 synonyms, none of which captures the fullness of the word as well as the Russian government has embodied it in this case.

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04
January 2011

The Khodorkovsky Verdict: Scaring Off Investment in Russia

Time Magazine

It must have been an awkward meeting for Russian President Dmitri Medvedev. On Dec. 29, he convened a session with his economic aides to talk about attracting talented businessmen to Moscow. No one mentioned that across the river from where they were sitting, a judge was reading out the guilty verdict of one of Russia’s most successful businessmen, oil tycoon Mikhail Khodorkovsky, whose case has scared off a lot of capital from the country. But when the subject turned to Russia’s appeal for investors, Medvedev’s tone became forlorn: “The investment climate in our country is bad. It’s very bad.” And everyone understood why.

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31
December 2010

Russia defies EU diplomacy on Khodorkovsky sentence

EU Observer

Experts have warned that polite diplomacy alone will have zero impact on an increasingly wayward Russia as EU leaders lined up to criticise the jailing of oil tycoon Mikhail Khodorkovsky on Thursday.

“There’s nothing anyone can say outside of Russia that has any effect on the Russians. They just laugh as we condemn their actions,” Bill Browder, the CEO of US venture capitalist firm Hermitage Capital, whose lawyer, Sergey Magnitsky, died in suspicious circumstances in a Russian prison last year, told this website shortly after the Khodorkovsky sentence.

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30
December 2010

Khodorkovsky Corner: Russia’s Red Capitalism

Trader Daily

While the old Soviet Union recoiled at the thought of capitalism, the new Russia has becoming increasingly dependent on capital from other nations. But as Russia seeks investors to fuel its growth, the safety of its political climate is receiving increased scrutiny.

Russia’s treatment of Mikhail Khodorkovsky, one of the nation’s richest men, has led many critics to wonder if Russia’s government is as bad as the USSR’s totalitarian regime.

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