Category: Russia

  • ISHBULDINO, Russia — A fire has killed 11 seniors in a private retirement home in Russia’s Republic of Bashkortostan.

    The Emergency Situations Ministry’s branch in Bashkortostan said on December 15 that the fire swept through the retirement house in the village of Ishbuldino overnight.

    According to the ministry, the house did not have a proper fire alarm system.

    Firefighters found the bodies of 11 elderly people who lived in the retirement house, the ministry said.

    Ildar Nafikov, governor of the Abzhalil district where Ishbuldino is located, said a state of emergency had been imposed in the district, adding that 16 elderly persons were residing in the retirement house permanently.

    Nafikov’s deputy, Ruslan Yusupov, said that although the nursing house was functioning legally, it was only supposed to be in use during the daytime.

    The Investigative Committee said there were 15 people inside the building when the fire broke out, of whom four managed to escape.

    The committee also said that it had launched a probe into the deadly fire.

    Deadly fires caused by violations of safety regulations or faulty wiring are common in Russia.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • Six weeks after the U.S. presidential election, Russian President Vladimir Putin has broken his silence on the outcome and congratulated Joe Biden on his victory in the vote following the Electoral College confirming that the Democratic challenger was the winner.

    The Kremlin’s website said on December 15 that in a message to Biden, Putin expressed hope that the two countries could “set aside differences and really promote the solution of many problems and challenges currently faced by the world.”

    Putin also wished Biden success, adding that: “For my part, I am ready for collaboration and contacts with you.”

    Putin’s spokesman has said the president was hesitant to congratulate Biden before Biden’s victory was officially announced.

    The December 14 vote by the Electoral College, which gave Biden 306 votes to 232 for Trump, officially cemented the former vice president’s victory in the November 3 presidential election.

    Trump has launched dozens of court cases challenging the results claiming, without showing proof, there was electoral fraud. He has lost almost all of the cases, and failed twice at the Supreme Court to have the results in some key states overturned.

    Putin noted that “the Russian-American cooperation based on the principles of equality and mutual respect would meet the interests of the people in both countries and the entire international community.”

    Biden is expected to take a tougher stance toward the Kremlin on its human rights record and foreign policies compared with Trump.

    He has repeatedly criticized Putin for Russia’s “malign actions,” including invading its neighbors and meddling in foreign elections, and recently called Moscow an “opponent.”

    Biden, who topped the incumbent Republican by more than 7 million in the popular vote nationwide, will be inaugurated on January 20, 2021.

    With reporting by Reuters and AP

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • ST. PETERSBURG, Russia — Prosecutors in the murder case against a flamboyant Russian professor who murdered and dismembered his student lover are seeking a 15-year prison term for a crime that has captivated St. Petersburg, Russia’s second-largest city, over the past year.

    Prosecutors Asya Lokotkova and Marina Suvorova asked the Oktyabr district court on December 14 to sentence Oleg Sokolov to 13 years in prison for murdering 24-year-old postgraduate student Anastasia Yeshchenko, and to three years in prison for illegally possessing a firearm, though they said the total prison term for the defendant should equal 15 years.

    The 64-year-old historian, who was once awarded France’s Order of Legion d’Honneur for his research into military leader Napoleon Bonaparte, was detained in St. Petersburg in November 2019 after being pulled out of the Moika River with a backpack containing the severed body parts of a young woman.

    Investigators later found the woman’s head in his apartment.

    Sokolov, who regularly dressed in Napoleon-era costumes and took part in battle reenactments, said during the hearing that he fully accepts guilt on all charges, but added that he was not sure if the murder was premeditated as, according to him, he killed his lover in a state of “temporary insanity.”

    The high-profile case has been adjourned or postponed several times in recent months for various reasons, including restrictions imposed to slow the spread of the coronavirus.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • ST. PETERSBURG, Russia — Prosecutors in the murder case against a flamboyant Russian professor who murdered and dismembered his student lover are seeking a 15-year prison term for a crime that has captivated St. Petersburg, Russia’s second-largest city, over the past year.

    Prosecutors Asya Lokotkova and Marina Suvorova asked the Oktyabr district court on December 14 to sentence Oleg Sokolov to 13 years in prison for murdering 24-year-old postgraduate student Anastasia Yeshchenko, and to three years in prison for illegally possessing a firearm, though they said the total prison term for the defendant should equal 15 years.

    The 64-year-old historian, who was once awarded France’s Order of Legion d’Honneur for his research into military leader Napoleon Bonaparte, was detained in St. Petersburg in November 2019 after being pulled out of the Moika River with a backpack containing the severed body parts of a young woman.

    Investigators later found the woman’s head in his apartment.

    Sokolov, who regularly dressed in Napoleon-era costumes and took part in battle reenactments, said during the hearing that he fully accepts guilt on all charges, but added that he was not sure if the murder was premeditated as, according to him, he killed his lover in a state of “temporary insanity.”

    The high-profile case has been adjourned or postponed several times in recent months for various reasons, including restrictions imposed to slow the spread of the coronavirus.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • Aleksei Vasilyev is a Yakut photographer and a rising Instagram star with tens of thousands of followers. His most famous project, titled My Dear Yakutia, evokes what he calls the “magic realism” of this part of Russia’s Far North, where people and spirits seem to cohabitate in frozen spaces. Vasilyev shared his images with the Siberia Desk of RFE/RL’s Russian Service, along with stories from behind the scenes.

    The Saardana arts-and-crafts factory produces traditional warm winter shoes, fur coats, and souvenirs. Founded in 1969, it's the oldest operating manufacturer of folk crafts in the region.

    The Saardana arts-and-crafts factory produces traditional warm winter shoes, fur coats, and souvenirs. Founded in 1969, it’s the oldest operating manufacturer of folk crafts in the region.

    “I started photographing in 2012-13, when social networks began to appear,” Vasilyev says. “Instagram became the first creative platform where I posted my work. Maybe it was just the result of idleness. There was nothing for me to do. The job I had at that time didn’t give me any pleasure. I went to work each day and just waited for it to end. I was working at a newspaper, but I never really had any talent for writing. It was the most ordinary, boring, monotonous life.

    “When I became interested in photography, I realized that it’s not necessary to write well if you can photograph well. And photography became a salvation for me from the meaninglessness life I had.”

    Aleksei Vasilyev

    Aleksei Vasilyev

    Vasilyev has won awards from the international Andrei Stenin photojournalism competition, the Young Photographers of Russia contest, and the LensCulture photography network, among others.

    Describing his photo of a frozen mammoth statue, Vasilyev says: “I went out into the streets and photographed. When the temperature reaches 40 below [zero Celsius], a white fog descends on the city and everything looks like some gloomy fairy tale. Or like in the movie Silent Hill. There are almost no passersby. The atmosphere is strange. And the mammoth in the fog looks almost alive.”

    A tent is set up for ice bathing on the Epiphany holiday in Yakutsk.

    A tent is set up for ice bathing on the Epiphany holiday in Yakutsk.

    This street scene in Yakutsk won Vasilyev one of his photography awards.

    This street scene in Yakutsk won Vasilyev one of his photography awards.

    “When I take pictures on the street, people often come up and ask what I’m doing. They ask if I’m not a spy. Somehow, such paranoia is typical of people in today’s Russia,” Vasilyev says.

    A worker carries boxes at the coldest market in the world, where frozen meat and fish are sold in the open.

    A worker carries boxes at the coldest market in the world, where frozen meat and fish are sold in the open.

    “Now I’ve almost completely stopped photographing in the street,” he says. “I don’t walk around the city for two or three hours like I did before, and I don’t take pictures of strangers. Ethical questions became important to me. Do I have the right to use their images on social networks or in a project without their permission? More often than not, people don’t really want that.”

    “But sometimes it happens that people want to be photographed. Freestyle wrestling is the No. 1 sport in Yakutia. We have many world champions, Russian champions, and participants in the Olympics. When I was filming a report at the Olympic Reserve School, one guy came up to me and asked me to take a picture of him for his parents living in a distant village.”

    “The village of Marsagalokh is 100 kilometers from Yakutsk. It’s one of my favorite places to shoot. A lot of Soviet aesthetics have been preserved there.”

    Twins Semyon and Stepan play dulganchas -- mythical swamp creatures -- during a film shoot.

    Twins Semyon and Stepan play dulganchas — mythical swamp creatures — during a film shoot.

    “My project Sakha Wood started in 2019 as a result of a collaboration with Yakut filmmakers. I attended six or seven filming sessions. There is a film boom in Yakutia now. We shoot comedies, horror movies, and dramas. But lately they’ve been trying to make fantastic and mythological movies.

    “These twins were acting in the movie The Beyberikeen With Five Cows, based on a Yakut tale. The boys played mythical swamp creatures called dulganchas. Many people have noted that these creatures are similar to characters in Star Wars.”

    Actors perform a scene in The Beyberikeen With Five Cows in August 2019.

    Actors perform a scene in The Beyberikeen With Five Cows in August 2019.

    “This is a scene from the same film, based on a Yakut story. It’s about the struggle between good and evil forces. The man with horns is the spirit of the underworld. According to Yakut beliefs, the world consists of three parts: the heavens, the middle world of people, and the lower world of evil spirits. This is a fight between a man and a spirit of the underworld.

    “The filmmakers here are dreamers. They try to do what they want with practically no resources. Sometimes they make something great, but most of the results are amateurish.”

    “This is a typical portrait of the Yakut TV audience. I wanted to show the people for whom the actors and the film crew are working. At first, I tried to take photos of the audience in the cinema but I didn’t like the result, and I deleted everything. Then I went to visit my friends. I saw them lying in front of the TV and felt that this was the mood I was trying to achieve.”

    Vasily, an actor, vapes between takes while playing a corpse in a morgue.

    Vasily, an actor, vapes between takes while playing a corpse in a morgue.

    “I took this photo during the filming of a mystical horror-drama called A Cursed Land. It’s a sequel to a film shot in 1996, which is considered a classic of modern Yakut cinema. The sequel was shot in 2019. This is the scene where the main character comes to the morgue to identify a body. The guy who vapes while playing the deceased is a popular actor for roles like this. Vaping in Yakutia is very popular, and there’s always smoke on the set.”

    18-year-old Yuliya

    18-year-old Yuliya

    “Once I was on assignment for The Moscow Times. I was asked to take portraits of 18-year-olds who were born and grew up during Putin’s presidency. This girl is from the ‘Putin generation.’ She’s now studying in Moscow. There are many young people who take an active civic role. But here [in Yakutia]…I don’t know, they probably think more about where to go to study and where to work afterwards.

    “During the photoshoot, this girl said she wasn’t interested in politics. This is typical for young people in the regions. It seems to me that they don’t really think about Putin much.”

    “The most memorable photo shoot I’ve done was at the end of October this year, when I visited the reindeer breeders in the northeast of Yakutia, in the Tomponsky district. The temperature was about minus 30 degrees Celsius. We rode a reindeer sleigh to the mountain peaks. It was an extreme trip — that’s why I remember it so well, I guess,” Vasilyev says.

    “In general, I want to leave an image of my region for posterity with my photographs. Maybe some years will pass and then people will look at these photos, and they will have an idea about life in Yakutia – a distant, cold land, but one that’s dear to me.”

    More of Vasilyev’s work can be seen on Instagram:

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • Suspected Russian hackers broke into U.S. government networks, including the Treasury and Commerce departments, in a major breach that may have been taking place for months.

    National Security Council spokesperson John Ullyot said in a statement on December 13 that the government was “taking all necessary steps to identify and remedy any possible issues related to this situation.”

    Reuters was the first report on the breach.

    Officials familiar with the matter said the hackers targeted the Treasury Department and the Commerce Department’s agency responsible for deciding internet and telecommunications policy. There is also concern networks at other government agencies may have been compromised.

    The situation is so serious the National Security Council gathered at the White House on December 12, Reuters reported.

    “This is a much bigger story than one single agency,” one of the people familiar with the matter told Reuters. “This is a huge cyber espionage campaign targeting the U.S. government and its interests.”

    Reuters and The Washington Post, citing U.S. officials, said Russian government hackers are currently believed to be behind the attack.

    The Federal Bureau of Investigation, the Department of Homeland Security’s cybersecurity arm, and other agencies are investigating.

    The breach, which also involved the hackers spying on internal email traffic at the targeted agencies, may have been taking place for months and only discovered now, officials said.

    The revelation comes after U.S. cybersecurity firm FireEye on December 8 said that “a nation with top-tier offensive capabilities” broke into its network.

    The hackers stole tools FireEye uses to test vulnerabilities in the computer networks of its customers, including federal, state, and local governments and top corporations.

    Many in the cybersecurity community suspect the Russian intelligence-linked hacking group known as APT29, or Cozy Bear, was behind the FireEye attack.

    The same group was behind attacks on the State Department and White House during the administration of President Barack Obama, as well as the hack of the Democratic National Committee’s servers during the 2016 presidential campaign.

    With reporting by AP, Reuters, and The Washington Post.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • Umar Kremlev of Russia was elected president of the troubled International Boxing Association (AIBA) on December 12, vowing to restore the body’s Olympic status.

    Kremlev won 57 percent of the vote in a five-candidate contest involving 155 national federations to become the new head of the sports body that represents amateur boxing worldwide.

    His selection came despite the concerns of Olympic officials about his candidacy.

    The International Olympic Committee (IOC) last year stripped AIBA of its right to run boxing at the Tokyo Games, postponed by a year to 2021 because of the coronavirus pandemic, amid concerns over the integrity of Olympic bouts, governance, and finance.

    The boxing competition at the Tokyo Olympics is instead being organized by the IOC Boxing Task Force.

    Kremlev, who is also the Russian boxing federation chief, said after his selection that his priority will be to eliminate AIBA’s debt and strengthen its governance structures in order to get the body reinstated by the IOC in time for the Paris Olympics in 2024.

    “Let me make it clear: the path to rebuilding AIBA is not easy. It will not happen overnight,” he said.

    “It will not happen overnight. We have to unite together and work with one mission, and one mission alone: rebuilding the credibility and trust that AIBA once had in the minds of sports people worldwide and that includes, of course, restoring AIBA’s Olympic status,” the 38 year old said.

    Kremlev will complete the presidential term of Gafur Rakhimov, an Uzbek businessman who U.S. authorities allege is involved with international heroin trafficking. Rakhimov has denied wrongdoing.

    Based on reporting by AFP, AP, and dpa.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • Armenia has accused Baku of violating a cease-fire agreement in the conflict over Azerbaijan’s Nagorno-Karabakh region.

    Armenia’s Defense Ministry said Azerbaijani forces attacked positions held by ethnic Armenian forces, the so-called Karabakh Defense Army, in Nagorno-Karabakh in the southern Hadrut district on December 12.

    Azerbaijan’s Defense Ministry issued a statement accusing the Armenian military of staging a “provocation” and insisted that the cease-fire agreement was holding.

    Karabakh Defense Army officials said three of its fighters were wounded in clashes on December 11.

    Russian peacekeepers monitoring the cease-fire agreement acknowledged violations in Hadrut on both days, but did not assign blame.

    “Small-arms shooting was recorded in the Hadrut district,” a spokesman for the peacekeeping force told journalists. “Through direct communications lines, the sides were promptly informed of our demand to completely observe the cease-fire regime.”

    Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev said the December 11 incident was a “terrorist attack” committed by “either Armenian gunmen or what is left of the Armenian Army” in Nagorno-Karabakh.

    Nagorno-Karabakh belongs to Azerbaijan, but it and some surrounding areas have been de facto controlled by Armenia-backed ethnic Armenian forces for decades. In September, Azerbaijan launched a military campaign that enabled Baku to regain control of large parts of the territory.

    In November, a Russia-brokered cease-fire agreement was reached, and some 2,000 Russian peacekeeping forces have been deployed to the conflict zone.

    Peace talks on the conflict have been coordinated by the Minsk Group of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE). French co-Chairman Stephane Visconti said in Baku on December 12 that Minsk Group mediators were ready to continue working toward a long-term settlement.

    “We are ready to work on your proposals and look for an acceptable option for the sides,” Visconti told Aliyev.

    Visconti added that the recent developments had produced “an absolutely new situation” in the region, “which could bring about stability.”

    With reporting by TASS, AP, and dpa

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • Russia has successfully conducted a test-firing of four intercontinental ballistic missiles (ICBMs), the country’s Defense Ministry has said.

    The ministry said on December 12 that the Vladimir Monomakh strategic nuclear submarine launched four Bulava ICBMs from an underwater position in the Sea of Okhotsk, off Russia’s Far East coast.

    According to the report, all the dummy warheads hit their targets in the Arkhangelsk region some 5,500 kilometers away.

    Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu said the test-firing was the final event of large-scale exercises of Russia’s strategic nuclear forces that began on December 9.

    The exercises included the launch of a ground-based ICBM and the test-firing of cruise missiles from Tu-160 and Tu-95 strategic bombers.

    Based on reporting by AP and TASS

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov has said Moscow continues to reject U.S. sanctions against Iran, has put its money where its mouth is by increasing trade with Tehran, and that Moscow will continue to look for new ways to counter the punitive measures.

    “We do not just refuse to recognize unilateral sanctions, but support Iran with specific measures,” Lavrov told Iranian state television in an interview on December 12. “Perhaps we are doing more than anyone else. In terms of figures, this amounts to billions of dollars.”

    Lavrov said Russian trade with Iran grew by 8 percent in the first half of the year, and that “we do not have such indicators actually with anyone else, when trade is growing and not decreasing amid coronavirus restrictions.”

    Russia’s top diplomat added that he was convinced that “we will be looking for new methods of ignoring the sanctions’ negative economic effect.”

    The administration of U.S. President Donald Trump has continued to increase pressure on Iran in its last weeks of office before President-elect Joe Biden’s inauguration.

    Last week, the Trump administration imposed sanctions on Iran’s envoy to the Huthi rebels in Yemen in what was seen as an attempt to force the Tehran-backed militants to negotiate a peace deal to end an ongoing civil war in which Iranian archenemy Saudi Arabia is heavily involved.

    Iran recently announced plans to increase its uranium-enrichment capabilities in violation of the 2015 nuclear deal with world powers.

    In 2018 the United States abandoned the agreement, under which Tehran curtailed its nuclear program in exchange for sanctions relief.

    Based on reporting by TASS and AFP

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • The International Criminal Court’s (ICC) chief prosecutor said December 11 that a preliminary probe found possible war crimes and crimes against humanity have been committed in Ukraine which warrant a full investigation by The Hague-based judges.

    After a six-year preliminary investigation, prosecutor Fatou Bensouda said in a statement that “there is a reasonable basis at this time to believe that a broad range of conduct constituting war crimes and crimes against humanity” have been committed during the Ukraine conflict.

    Russia occupied and illegally annexed the Crimean Peninsula from Ukraine in March 2014, following the pro-EU Maidan demonstrations which ousted pro-Moscow President Viktor Yanukovich. Russia has also backed separatists in eastern Ukraine in a conflict that has killed more than 13,000 people since 2014.

    Without naming suspects or delving into details of the alleged crimes, Bensouda said that her preliminary investigation found three “broad clusters of victimization.”

    She said these were crimes committed during hostilities, during detentions, and crimes committed in Crimea.

    “My Office furthermore found that these crimes, committed by the different parties to the conflict, were also sufficiently grave to warrant investigation by my Office, both in quantitative and qualitative terms,” she said.

    Although Ukraine is not a member of the ICC, it accepted the world court’s jurisdiction in 2014 to investigate the crackdown on Maidan protesters and later extended the jurisdiction to cover conflicts in Crimea and eastern Ukraine. Russia is not a member of the court and does not accept its jurisdiction.

    The ICC only takes cases when member states do not or cannot prosecute them in domestic courts, a situation which Bensouda said applied to the potential cases that would likely arise from an investigation.

    Bensouda said the next step would be to ask judges at the ICC for permission to open a full-blown probe.

    She did not provide a timeframe of when this would happen, but noted that the ICC’s capacity and resources are stretched thin.

    Ukraine welcomed the prosecutor’s announcement, describing it as an “historic decision.”

    “International justice may not be served fast, but it is surely inevitable. One day Russian criminals will face trial,” Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba said on Twitter.

    There was no immediate comment from Russia, which in the past has dismissed the ICC and denies involvement in the conflict in eastern Ukraine.

    The ICC was set up in 2002 to probe the world’s worst crimes.

    With reporting by AFP, AP, and Reuters.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • Work has resumed in Baltic Sea waters off the German coast on the controversial Nord Stream 2 natural-gas pipeline, project managers said in a statement on December 11.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • To receive Steve Gutterman’s Week In Russia each week via e-mail, subscribe by clicking here.

    The Kremlin issued a strenuous nondenial of a report linking lucrative sweetheart deals to President Vladimir Putin’s purported former son-in-law, drawing comparisons with a decade he disdains. A top-secret “doomsday plane” was stripped of equipment by thieves. And new sanctions underscored the cost, in terms of image at least, of Putin’s reliance on Ramzan Kadyrov.

    Here are some of the key developments in Russia over the past week and some of the takeaways going forward.

    State Of Dismissal

    The Kremlin has become practiced in issuing nondenial denials over the years under President Vladimir Putin — and it got some more practice this past week.

    First, there was the report that Russian businessman Kirill Shamalov received a slew of offers to buy stakes in some of the country’s biggest companies shortly after marrying Putin’s younger daughter in 2013 — and did consummate at least one sweetheart deal, receiving a stake worth an estimated $380 million in a Russian petrochemicals company for $100.

    The December 7 report was the product of an investigation by Russian outlet iStories, and was published in collaboration with the Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project (OCCRP). It used leaked e-mails to “shine new light on the closed circle of family and associates who surround the Russian president,” as The Guardian put it.

    The Kremlin has done a fair amount to prevent such light from being shed. For example, Putin has acknowledged that he has two daughters but has never publicly confirmed reports revealing their identity — and by extension, he has not acknowledged that Shamalov is his former son-in-law.

    In any case, and as is often the case, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov dismissed the iStories/OCCRP report but did not directly deny it.

    In remarks quoted by state news agency TASS, he suggested it was part of a disinformation campaign involving “various rumors, often having nothing to do with reality.”

    Peskov’s remarks seemed intended to discredit any future reports alleging dubious deals or wrongdoing by Putin and those close to him: “We know, more or less, who is the organizer of this activity, and we know that this work will continue.”

    Office Double?

    The following day, Peskov dismissed a more bizarre report, this one saying that that the Kremlin has built an office for Putin in Sochi that is identical to his office outside Moscow, and that Putin has frequently — and secretly — worked in the Black Sea resort city at times in recent months.

    “It turns out that we don’t know where Putin has been located” in recent weeks or months, the December 8 report by the online publication Proyekt Media said, citing unnamed sources it said were familiar with his schedule as well as analysis of flight-tracking records.

    One claim that Peskov did deny was that Putin is having serious health problems. In remarks on December 8, he cast that assertion as part of the same alleged “information exercise” that produced the report about Shamalov but was less equivocal, saying: “As regards [Putin’s] health, that is complete nonsense.”

    In remarks to another online Russian news outlet, Peskov called the report “the latest stupidity” but stopped short of a direct denial. He said Putin had been working in the Moscow area and taking trips for work at times, but did not give dates or mention whether he had been in Sochi recently.

    Putin, 67, secured the right to run for a fifth presidential term in 2024 and a sixth term in 2030 by pushing though constitutional changes earlier this year.

    The late Russian President Boris Yeltsin (left) smiles as he talks to Vladimir Putin, the day he named his prime minister acting president.

    The late Russian President Boris Yeltsin (left) smiles as he talks to Vladimir Putin, the day he named his prime minister acting president.

    He rose to power in 1999, when President Boris Yeltsin named him prime minister in August and then resigned on New Year’s Eve, making him acting president.

    Putin, whose first two terms coincided with an oil-fueled economic boom, has frequently taken aim at the decade before he entered the Kremlin, portraying the 1900s as a modern-day time of troubles in which Russia came close to ceasing to exist in the wake of the Soviet Union’s collapse.

    Allies have cast him as a savior who raised the country off its knees, while detractors say problems like corruption have only gotten worse, not to speak of democracy and human rights.

    Doomsday Scenario?

    For those who argue that Russia took a big wrong turn in the 1990s, one event that stands out is “loans-for-shares” — the controversial auctions, launched 25 years ago, in which leading businessmen bought stakes in top state enterprises at low prices. Putin’s supporters praise him for reining in some of the tycoons who increased their wealth and power in such deals.

    But for critics of the Kremlin, Shamalov’s reported windfall – as well as numerous investigations published by other groups, including opposition leader Aleksei Navalny’s Anti-Corruption Foundation – bolster suspicions that corruption and connections are a major part of Putin’s ruling apparatus.

    An entirely different occurrence this week evoked memories of the 1990s, when the theft of copper wire, railroad tracks, and other scraps of Soviet-era infrastructure that could be sold for cash was the stuff of frequent news reports — while more alarming reports stemmed from the theft and smuggling of radioactive materials.

    On December 9, the Rostov regional branch of the Interior Ministry said that more than 1 million rubles ($13,600) worth of equipment was stolen from an Ilyushin Il-80 — an aircraft dubbed the “doomsday plane” that was designed to shield top officials from the effects of a nuclear explosion — at a military airfield in the southern city of Taganrog.

    Russian media earlier reported that thieves broke into the aircraft, described as a highly classified military plane, and stole electronic equipment including radio boards. Military experts say the plane is one of four Il-80s designed to be used as airborne command posts for the Russian president and other top officials in the event of a nuclear conflict.

    Peskov described the theft as an “emergency situation” and said that “measures will be taken to prevent this from happening again.”

    ‘Egregious Activities’

    Putin is also credited, including by Putin, for the lower level of violence in the North Caucasus today compared to the 1990s: Two separatist wars wracked Chechnya from 1994 to 2001, killing tens of thousands of people and fueling an Islamist insurgency in that province and other regions nearby.

    Since 2007, when he appointed Ramzan Kadyrov to head Chechnya, Putin has relied on a figure reviled by human rights activists to maintain control over the region.

    The price of that trade-off, at least in terms of Putin’s image in the West, was underscored when the United States imposed additional sanctions on Kadyrov and announced punitive measures targeting five individuals and six Russia-registered legal entities with close ties to him, including a soccer team based in Chechnya, Akhmat Grozny.

    Vladimir Putin with Chechen leader Ramzan Kadyrov (right) in 2011.

    Vladimir Putin with Chechen leader Ramzan Kadyrov (right) in 2011.

    Since sanctions were initially imposed on Kadyrov in 2017, forces under his guidance continued “egregious activities” including “kidnapping, torturing, and killing members of the LGBTI population” in Chechnya, the U.S. Treasury Department said, adding that these forces “are accused of illegal abductions, torture, extrajudicial executions, and other abuses, including the detention of journalists and activists.”

    The new sanctions were imposed under the so-called Global Magnitsky Act, a 2016 law that authorizes the U.S. government to seek to punish suspected human rights offenders around the world by freezing any assets in the United States and banning them from entering the country.

    The law is named after Sergei Magnitsky, a whistle-blower who was jailed in Moscow, exposed the alleged theft of $230 million from Russian state coffers by a group of state officials. Denied adequate medical treatment and subjected to conditions rights groups said amounted to torture, he died in custody in November 2009, almost a decade after the start of the Putin era.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • MOSCOW — Photographer Boris Antonov doesn’t remember exactly how he found out that former Beatle John Lennon had been shot to death in New York on December 8, 1980.

    It definitely wasn’t from the Soviet media, he recalled. In his personal archive, Antonov still has a tiny clipping from a back page of the Soviet daily Trud that announced the news in three terse sentences on December 10.

    But word of Lennon’s killing “spread rather quickly” among his friends, Antonov told RFE/RL.

    “It was a shock, of course,” Antonov, who at the time was a student at the Moscow Communications Institute, said. “Because the Beatles seemed to be eternal. They had been there our whole lives.”

    The tiny Soviet press clipping that Boris Antonov saw announcing John Lennon's death in December 1980.

    The tiny Soviet press clipping that Boris Antonov saw announcing John Lennon’s death in December 1980.

    Antonov stressed that he was an ordinary Soviet kid from the outlying Moscow neighborhood of Kuntsevo.

    “No one in my circle had dissident views or any doubts about socialism,” he said. “Downtown was where the kids lived whose fathers were in cinema or were diplomats or professors. The so-called Golden Youth who had blue jeans and the latest Deep Purple album.”

    Antonov did, however, play bass in a neighborhood band. He remembers hearing the Beatles’ 1965 song Girl when he was in the seventh grade on a Soviet compilation album called Musical Kaleidoscope No. 8.

    And there were rare glimpses of the English rockers even on Soviet television.

    “There was a television show called America In The Viewfinder that began with a clip from Can’t Buy Me Love,” Antonov remembered. “The show was about how hard life was for American workers. But we didn’t care about that. The main thing for us was those 20 seconds of the Beatles.”

    A young Boris Antonov plays guitar with a bandmate and a poster of Lenin in the background.

    A young Boris Antonov plays guitar with a bandmate and a poster of Lenin in the background.

    One time, he said, he was in a record store when the clerk decided to show off to his friends by playing the 1969 hit Come Together.

    “That was a shock,” he said, recalling how Lennon’s vocals stood out compared to the Soviet pop stars that dominated the airwaves at the time. “We were surrounded by [Iosif] Kobzon, Aida Vedishcheva, Valentina Tolkkunova….”

    In the late 1970s, and especially as the 1980 Moscow Olympic Games approached, the atmosphere became more relaxed. In 1977, the Soviet record label Melodia released Lennon’s 1971 album Imagine.

    On December 20, 1980, Antonov saw a small notice on a bulletin board at the Moscow Communications Institute. It invited “all admirers and fans of the music of the Beatles” to come “tomorrow” to the Lenin Hills overlook near the main building of Moscow State University (MGU) at 11 a.m. for a gathering of “those who want to honor the memory of John Lennon.”

    The small notice that Antonov found on a bulletin board at the Moscow Communications Institute

    The small notice that Antonov found on a bulletin board at the Moscow Communications Institute

    Across the bottom of the announcement, someone had written: “Those who are afraid of repressions please don’t come.”

    “It was evening, and I was putting on my coat to leave,” Antonov told RFE/RL. “That’s when I saw it. I wanted to take it because it was such a nice thing. I argued a little with myself — maybe I should let more people find out about it. But it was already late, and the institute was about to close. I thought I wouldn’t harm freedom or Lennon’s memory, so I carefully took it down and hid it away.”

    Antonov said he worried a bit about the possibility of trouble if he participated in the memorial, but that “just made it more interesting, with a little risk and fear.”

    “Of course, we weren’t worried that they would beat us or arrest us, but we knew that there could be trouble,” he added, including the possibility of being expelled from the institute.

    That evening, a friend was celebrating his birthday with a listening of the Pink Floyd album The Wall. Antonov told them about the Lennon gathering, but none of them wanted to go.

    “They were simply afraid,” he said.

    Already a budding photographer, Antonov loaded a fresh roll of film in his camera the next morning and headed to the Lenin Hills overlook, a prominent platform with a panoramic view over the Soviet capital. As it turned out, Antonov took almost all of the surviving photographs of the event.

    When he arrived at about 11:30, there were “200-300 people gathered near the famous granite barrier.” Two people were holding a banner reading “To The Blessed Memory Of John Lennon.” Another young man, apparently a student, had a sign around his neck with the word “Imagine” and the third verse of Lennon’s iconic song of that title written on it.

    In a memoir written for the website Beatles.ru, Antonov said he saw a young man take off his hat and give a moving, heartfelt tribute to Lennon in a voice breaking with sorrow.

    “He spoke of Lennon as a great musician and as a fighter for social justice,” Antonov wrote. “For the rights of blacks, for peace. He concluded with the words, ‘Together with Lennon forever!’”

    Others stepped up and concluded their speeches with similar slogans that had Soviet echoes: “Lennon hasn’t died!” or “Lennon forever!”

    “One young man shouted, ‘Give peace a chance!’ and threw up a peace sign,” Antonov wrote.

    Antonov said he doesn’t recall any particular anti-Soviet sentiment at the event. He said a single police officer stood nearby and watched. One or two photographers from the international press snapped photos. An article later appeared in London’s The Daily Telegraph.

    A police officer stands by as Beatles fans mourn John Lennon in December 1980.

    A police officer stands by as Beatles fans mourn John Lennon in December 1980.

    Nonetheless, participants began being detained as the demonstration was breaking up and people were heading to the nearest metro station.

    “The police and, according to rumors, government collaborators from MGU, began to push the loudest participants around and shove them toward a bus,” Antonov wrote in his memoir. “People couldn’t believe their eyes. No one had any experience of anything like that. One guy asked a police officer to explain what was happening and began citing various rights and freedoms from the constitution…. The crowd started getting angry. You could hear people shouting some bold things at the police and particularly at the security officers in plain clothes who had until that moment been standing around pretending to be [Lennon] fans and who were now ushering activists into the bus.”

    Antonov said the crowd linked arms and continued walking toward the metro. As they passed the bus with the detainees, Antonov said he shouted, “Guys, we are with you!”

    Altogether, a few hundred Beatles fans gathered in the Soviet capital to mark Lennon's death.

    Altogether, a few hundred Beatles fans gathered in the Soviet capital to mark Lennon’s death.

    For Antonov, the breaking point came when a police officer tried to detain the young man who had earlier been quoting the constitution.

    “‘We won’t give him up!’” Antonov recalled saying. At that point, the police grabbed him too. Antonov said he instinctively resisted, kicking out with his legs after both his arms were restrained.

    “But, of course, it was pointless,” he said. “They kicked me into the bus.”

    “We somehow felt that right was on our side,” Antonov recalled. “We knew that we were innocent and that our cause was just.”

    The crowd was even angrier, he said, because most of those who were detaining them were MGU student collaborators and informers.

    The detainees were taken to various police stations for questioning. Antonov said none of the officers was rude to him. One of them even said that he liked the Beatles himself.

    Antonov said he later heard that some of the detainees had various problems, including being disciplined at their institutes.

    “But none of the people I knew personally had any such problems,” he told RFE/RL.

    A year later, in December 1981, Soviet Lennon fans tried to organize another, similar event on the first anniversary of the tragedy. But this time the Soviet authorities were prepared.

    Antonov and a couple of friends tried to approach the Lenin Hills overlook.

    “We were grabbed when we were still 300 or 400 meters from the viewing point,” he recalled. “The police came up to us and said, ‘Boys, where are you going?’ ‘Just taking a walk,’ we answered. ‘Well, take a walk with us then.’”

    Written by RFE/RL senior correspondent Robert Coalson based on reporting from Moscow by RFE/RL Russian Service correspondent Valentin Baryshnkov.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • European Union leaders on December 10 gave the green light for a six-month extension of the economic sanctions that were imposed against Russia over its role in the ongoing conflict in Ukraine.

    French President Emmanuel Macron and German Chancellor Angela Merkel briefed other EU heads of state and government about the state of play in the Normandy Format talks during an EU summit in Brussels. They recommended a sanctions extension because little progress had been made, according to diplomats familiar with the talks who spoke with RFE/RL.

    The so-called Normandy Format is a diplomatic process involving Ukraine, Russia, Germany, and France aimed at resolving the conflict in parts of eastern Ukraine between Russia-backed separatist formations and the Kyiv government.

    There has not been a formal Normandy Format summit since December 2019, while the one before that was held in October 2016.

    The sanctions were first adopted in July 2014 after Russia forcibly annexed Ukraine’s Crimean Peninsula and started providing military support to the separatists fighting against Kyiv in a conflict that has killed more than 13,200 people.

    Since then, the sanctions have been extended every six months.

    EU ambassadors will officially prolong the measures — which mainly target Russia’s financial, energy, and defense sectors — in the coming week.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • The Netherlands has ordered the expulsion of two Russians with diplomatic accreditation after a Dutch intelligence agency accused them of espionage targeting the country’s science and technology sectors.

    The General Intelligence and Security Service (AIVD) said on December 10 that the two unidentified Russians were seeking information on artificial intelligence, semiconductors, and nanotechnology.

    The service added that the two men work for Russia’s civilian intelligence agency, known as the SVR.

    The Russian Embassy in the Netherlands confirmed the expulsion order, saying that “no evidence that might prove their illegal activity in the country’s territory was presented.”

    “Retaliatory measures will follow,” the embassy’s statement added.

    The incident threatens to further aggravate tensions between the two countries, which have had strained relations since Malaysia Airlines flight MH17 was shot down over eastern Ukraine in 2014.

    The passenger jet was traveling from Amsterdam to Kuala Lumpur when it was shot down by an antiaircraft system provided by Moscow to Russia-backed separatists waging a war against Kyiv, Dutch and international investigators have concluded.

    All 298 people aboard the flight, including 196 Dutch citizens, were killed.

    Moscow denies involvement in the downing of MH17 and in the conflict in parts of eastern Ukraine.

    In 2018, the Netherlands expelled four alleged Russian spies who were accused of attempting to hack into the computers of the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons, which is based in The Hague.

    Based on reporting by AP, Reuters, TASS, and dpa

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • The United States has imposed another set of sanctions targeting Ramzan Kadyrov, the strongman leader of Russia’s North Caucasus region of Chechnya and a loyal supporter of Russian President Vladimir Putin.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • Two employees of the Moscow-based Foundation for the Protection of Traditional Values with links to a notorious Russian “troll farm” have been released from Libyan custody where they had been held since May 2019.

    The foundation’s chief, Aleksandr Malkevich, who also edits a controversial English-language website titled USA Really, said on December 10 that Russian citizens Maksim Shugalei and Samer Khasan Ali Sueifan had been released and are on their way back to Moscow.

    Libyan authorities said last year that Shugalei, who is also a lawmaker in Russia’s northern Komi Republic, and his interpreter Sueifan, were arrested on suspicion of trying to influence upcoming elections in Libya, which Russian officials have denied.

    Shugalei and the foundation are widely known to have links to the Internet Research Agency, a St. Petersburg-based organization known as the Russian “troll farm.”

    Owned by the Kremlin-connected businessman Yevgeny Prigozhin, the troll farm was mentioned repeatedly by U.S. Special Counsel Robert Mueller in his investigation into Russian interference in the 2016 U.S. presidential election.

    The foundation says it is a “a nonprofit organization whose activities are aimed at protecting the national interests of the Russian Federation.”

    In 2018, the U.S. Treasury Department slapped economic sanctions on Malkevich, saying USA Really was “posting content focused on divisive political issues but is generally ridden with inaccuracies.”

    With reporting by RIA Novosti and TASS

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • Viktor Kozlov used to drive a tractor on a Soviet-era state farm, but when times got tough, he moved to the coal-rich Siberian region of Krasnoyarsk and started selling coal to residents there to heat their homes. Most of his customers are poor and he sells coal on credit to keep them warm through the bitter winter.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • Foreign Ministers of the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS) have approved a draft concept on further developing cooperation in several areas, including the coronavirus pandemic.

    The Kazakh Foreign Ministry said in a statement that ministers approved a number of documents at the December 10 meeting, including a concept of military cooperation between CIS member states to 2025.

    It added that the Council of the CIS leaders will be held online on December 18.

    “The participants discussed a wide range of integration cooperation issues within the CIS, with a special emphasis on joint actions to overcome the negative effects of the coronavirus pandemic,” the Russian Foreign Ministry said after the meeting.

    CIS members are former Soviet republics — Azerbaijan, Armenia, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Moldova, Russia, Tajikistan, and Uzbekistan. Turkmenistan has an associate status in the grouping.

    Ukraine quit the grouping in 2018, four years after Russia forcibly annexed Ukraine’s Crimea region in March 2014 and started backing separatists in Ukraine’s east in a conflict that has killed more than 13,200 people since April 2014.

    Ukraine was an associate member of the CIS since the grouping was established following the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991.

    Earlier, in 2009, another former Soviet republic, Georgia, quit the CIS following a five-day Russian-Georgian war in August 2008, after which Russia has maintained troops in Georgia’s breakaway regions of South Ossetia and Abkhazia and recognized their independence from Tbilisi.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • Authorities in Denmark say they have charged a Russian citizen living in the Scandinavian country with espionage for allegedly providing information about Danish energy technology to Russia.

    The suspect, whose identity was not revealed, has been held in custody since early July, the Danish prosecution service said in a statement on December 9.

    It said the Russian is accused of providing “information about, among other things, Danish energy technology to a Russian intelligence service” in exchange for money.

    The Russian Embassy in Copenhagen identified the suspect as a man and called his arrest “a mistake.”

    Danish prosecutors said the case is connected to “a major investigation” by the Danish Security and Intelligence Service.

    If found guilty, the Russian suspect faces imprisonment or deportation.

    The Russian Embassy called on the Danish judiciary to “take an unbiased approach to the case,” and said it hoped “our compatriot” would be acquitted in court and freed.

    The district court of Aalborg, northern Denmark, will handle the case but has yet to set a date on the proceedings, which are expected to be held behind closed doors

    In 2012, a Finnish national working with the University of Copenhagen as a researcher was sentenced to five months in prison for spying on Denmark on behalf of Russia.

    Based on reporting by Reuters and AP

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • Russia’s Nedorazumeniya Island, a major transit center for prisoners sent to gulag camps during Soviet dictator Josef Stalin’s Great Purge campaign in the 1930s, is once again uninhabited after its last resident died.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • Prominent U.S. cybersecurity firm FireEye says it has recently been targeted by hackers with “world-class capabilities,” believing that the hacking was state-sponsored.

    In a blog post on December 8, FireEye CEO Kevin Mandia said the hackers broke into its network and stole tools used for testing customers’ security.

    “The attacker primarily sought information related to certain government customers,” Mandia wrote, without naming them.

    The blog post did not say when the attack was detected. It said the company is investigating the hack with the FBI.

    Matt Gorham, assistant director of the FBI’s cyberdivision, said the hackers’ “high level of sophistication [was] consistent with a nation state.”

    Cybersecurity experts say sophisticated nation-state hackers could modify the stolen “red team” tools and wield them in the future against government or industry targets.

    Many in the cybersecurity community suspect Russia for the hack, including Jake Williams, president of cybersecurity firm Rendition Infosec.

    “I do think what we know of the operation is consistent with a Russian state actor,” Williams said. “Whether or not customer data was accessed, it’s still a big win for Russia.”

    FireEye is a California-based firm used by companies and governments throughout the world to protect them from hacking.

    The company has been at the forefront of investigating state-backed hacking groups and played a key role in identifying Russia as the protagonist in numerous hacks, including the attacks in 2015 and 2016 on Ukraine’s energy grid.

    Mandia said he had concluded that “a nation with top-tier offensive capabilities” was behind the attack.

    The attackers “tailored their world-class capabilities specifically to target and attack FireEye,” using “a novel combination of techniques not witnessed by us or our partners in the past,” the blog said.

    The hack was said to be the biggest blow to the U.S. cybersecurity community since hackers in 2016 released hacking tools stolen from the National Security Agency (NSA).

    The United States believes Russia and North Korea capitalized on the stolen tools to unleash global cyberattacks.

    With reporting by AP and the BBC

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov is to meet senior members of the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) in Moscow on December 8 in what the Kremlin terms a “very important visit.”

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • Western sanctions have had an “outsized impact” on targeted Russian companies but may have actually strengthened President Vladimir Putin’s grip on the country’s tycoons, an economist and former State Department official says.

    Russian corporations have lost almost $100 billion since sanctions were imposed in 2014 following the annexation of Crimea, an amount equivalent to about 4.2 percent of the country’s economy at the time, said Daniel Ahn, the chief U.S. economist at BNP Paribas and former deputy chief economist at the State Department.

    Putin’s attempts to shield some of those companies from the sanctions through tax breaks, state contracts, and other methods increased the total impact of sanctions on the economy to 8 percent, a number that is larger than other studies, he said.

    “So 8 percent is not anything to sneeze at. It is a big number,” said Ahn, speaking during a virtual conference on December 7 organized by the Kennan Institute.

    Ahn co-authored a study on sanctions with Rodney Ludema, a professor at Georgetown University in Washington and the former chief economist at the State Department. The study was published last month in the European Economic Review.

    Western sanctions against the Kremlin have been hotly debated in recent years, with some arguing that they have had little impact on the Russian economy or on Putin’s behavior, pointing to Moscow’s continued interference in Ukraine as an example. Others argue the sanctions have constrained Putin from undertaking even more aggressive action internationally and have weakened his domestic support.

    There had been some hope that the sanctions would drive a wedge between Putin and the tycoons whose fortunes were damaged by them. Ahn said the opposite might have happened.

    Putin used the state’s resources to deflect the impact on certain companies, especially those in the defense and technology sphere, making the tycoons even more dependent on the president.

    “By controlling the ability of who to shield and who not to shield, the Russian regime has tightened and consolidated its hold over critical sectors of the economy,” he said.

    Ahn told the conference his study of the impact of sanctions differs from those conducted by others, such as the International Monetary Fund (IMF), because he and Ludema focused on the effect on corporations — or the microeconomy — rather than the macroeconomy.

    He said Russian companies dependent on Western imports for producing their goods or services had been much more impacted than companies exporting to the West.

    “By denying key Western financial, legal, technological, and other services that may account for a relatively small amount of value added, but are actually critical for the operations of a company, we have had an outsized impact upon the Russian economy,” he said.

    However, he said Russia had taken steps to insulate its economy, including from the Western financial system, and thus sanctions will have diminishing returns going forward.

    Ahn said he was surprised to discover that U.S. sanctions have had a greater impact than European sanctions even though Russia’s economy is much more dependent on Europe.

    He chalked that up to tougher enforcement by U.S. authorities of the sanctions regime, including fining companies for noncompliance. He also said that European sanctions tended to target political figures rather than businessmen.

    U.S. Collateral Damage

    Randi Levinas, executive vice president and chief operations officer of the U.S.-Russia Business Council, a trade organization, told the conference that Western sanctions had also hurt U.S. companies, such as credit-card firms.

    Congress, she said, needed to take a “360-degree view” of the consequences of sanctions because U.S. companies “are getting slammed” in the process.

    She said Congress passed the sweeping Russia sanctions bill known as CAATSA in 2017 very quickly without giving U.S. companies the opportunity for input. Congress is currently considering several Russian sanctions bills.

    “It really is incumbent on our policymakers, including those in Congress, to consider making sanctions conduct-based and targeted in such a way that they’re considering the impact on U.S. companies, on U.S. national economic interests, and our U.S. global competitiveness,” she said.

    U.S. companies could lose out on business to Chinese firms in Russia, she said.

    Levinas said U.S. sanctions-policy development could shift back to the White House from Congress when President-elect Joe Biden takes office next month.

    While some have speculated that Biden could impose more sanctions on Russia, Levinas said a lot “will depend on Russia and its actions.”

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • The United States has included Iran, Pakistan, Tajikistan, and Turkmenistan on a list of 10 countries designated for “particular concern” over religious freedom.

    The designation was issued under the International Religious Freedom Act of 1998 “for engaging in or tolerating systematic, ongoing, egregious violations of religious freedom,” Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said in a news release.

    The United States also placed Russia and three other countries on a “special watch list” for governments that have engaged in or tolerated “severe violations of religious freedom.”

    The United States “once again took action to defend those who simply want to exercise this essential freedom,” Pompeo said.

    “The U.S. is unwavering in its commitment to religious freedom,” Pompeo added on Twitter. “No country or entity should be allowed to persecute people with impunity because of their beliefs. These annual designations show that when religious freedom is attacked, we will act.”

    The countries designated for “particular concern” are Burma, China, Eritrea, Iran, Nigeria, North Korea, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, Tajikistan, and Turkmenistan.

    The countries placed on the special watch list are the Comoros, Cuba, Nicaragua, and Russia.

    Pompeo also said Al-Qaeda, Islamic State, and the Taliban were among several militant extremist groups designated as “entities of particular concern.”

    The announcement also said Uzbekistan and Sudan have been removed from the special watch list based on “significant, concrete progress” by their governments over the past year.

    “Their courageous reforms of their laws and practices stand as models for other nations to follow,” Pompeo said.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • A young Russian businessman received a host of proposals to buy stakes in some of the nation’s largest companies shortly after marrying a woman reported to be President Vladimir Putin’s youngest daughter, a new investigative report shows.

    Kirill Shamalov, who married Katerina Tikhonova in February 2013, had received at least four deals by April 2014 to buy shares in Russian companies in the telecommunications, real estate, oil services, and metals industry worth billions of dollars,a trove of his emails that were leaked to Istories and the Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project (OCCRP) and published on December 7 show.

    The emails, which go back to 2003 and whose authenticity have been confirmed with multiple sources, may give an inside peek into how quickly people can acquire enormous wealth upon entering Putin’s inner circle. Shamalov was just 30 at the time he married Tikhonova. Putin has never admitted that Tikhonova is his daughter.

    Katerina Tikhonova (file photo)

    Katerina Tikhonova (file photo)

    Shamalov would eventually agree in August 2014 to buy a 17 percent stake in petrochemicals giant Sibur from Putin’s long-time associate Gennady Timchenko, who decided to cut his stake in the company after being sanctioned by the United States, the report said.

    The emails do not state how much Shamalov paid for the Sibur stake. Shamalov would later claim that the company was worth $10 billion, potentially valuing the deal at $1.7 billion. However, Sibur is not a publicly traded company and its market value cannot be precisely determined.

    The report says it is unclear how Shamalov would have been able to buy Timchenko’s 17 percent stake since he would not have had enough collateral for such a large loan. However, an earlier proposal may give some indication.

    When Shamalov was given an offer to buy stakes in three telecommunications companies worth billions of dollars in May 2013, just three months after his marriage, his assistant suggested he borrow from “friendly financial institutions” like Gazfond, the pension fund of state-controlled Gazprom, which was headed by Shamalov’s brother, the report said.

    Shamalov did not randomly meet Tikhonova. He had known Putin’s daughter since childhood, the report states. His father, Nikolai Shamalov, is one of Putin’s oldest and closest friends.

    Preferential Treatment?

    Shamalov began working at Sibur in his 20s and, shortly after marrying Tikhonova, received a 3.8 percent stake in the company for just $100. The stake was potentially worth hundreds of millions at the time.

    Sibur’s Chairman Dmitry Konov said then that Shamalov acquired the stake as part of a company stock-option program. Many large companies offer stock to management and employees at a discount to stimulate their performance.

    However, the OCCRP report shows that other Sibur managers paid millions of dollars for their stock options, indicating that Shamalov received preferential treatment.

    Shortly after Russia annexed Crimea, prompting the U.S. and Europe to impose sanctions on people in Putin’s inner circle, including Timchenko, Shamalov was offered the chance to buy a 51 percent stake in titanium producer VSMPO-Avisma to potentially insulate himself.

    Since VSMPO-Avisma’s clients included major Western aerospace companies, Washington and Brussels would not sanction its controlling owner for fear of hurting its own economy, his assistant reasoned.

    The United States would eventually sanction Shamalov in April 2018. However, by then, he had split up with Tikhonova after less than five years of marriage and had sold his stake in Sibur for an undisclosed price.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • Following the latest fighting over Nagorno-Karabakh, Azerbaijan has retaken control over all seven districts around Karabakh that had been occupied by Armenian forces since the early 1990s.

    Azerbaijani forces also regained territory in parts of Nagorno-Karabakh itself.

    A Russian-brokered cease-fire deal has seen the deployment of nearly 2,000 Russian peacekeepers to ensure security in the enclave and its only overland link with Armenia — the so-called Lachin corridor through southwestern Azerbaijan.

    RFE/RL Armenian Service Director Harry Tamrazian spoke on December 5 to Carnegie Europe’s noted Caucasus expert Thomas de Waal about the region’s prospects for diplomacy and its changing geopolitics.

    RFE/RL: Since the 1990s, the Minsk Group of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) has been the mediator between Armenia and Azerbaijan in negotiations over Nagorno-Karabakh. Now, with Azerbaijan having retaken the seven districts around Nagorno-Karabakh, as well as parts of Nagorno-Karabakh itself, is the Minsk Group dead? Now, with Azerbaijan having retaken the seven occupied districts around Nagorno-Karabakh in recent fighting, as well as parts of Nagorno-Karabakh itself, is the Minsk Group finished? Or is there still a role for its co-chairs — the United States, France, and Russia — in order to have a meaningful impact on the process?

    Thomas de Waal: I think we’re in a completely different phase of this conflict. We have a cease-fire and truce. But we are very far from a political agreement. And the question of the status of Karabakh, I think, is even more difficult now to solve. As [far as] the Azerbaijani side is concerned, this question [of a special status for Nagorno-Karabakh] is now off the table. It is no longer up for discussion.

    But there still need to be negotiations about the future normalization of relations between Armenia and Azerbaijan. And I suppose the Minsk Group is the only format where that is possible at the moment. That’s going to be very difficult.

    Thomas de Waal

    Thomas de Waal

    I think the Minsk Group has suffered a lot of reputational damage in the region — particularly France in Azerbaijan, which I don’t think regards France as an honest mediator anymore.

    Russia is now in control. There are big questions as to whether the United States and France can still play an important mediating role. But something has to be done.

    Personally, I would like to see some improvements. I would like to see another European power which has more influence in Baku. It would be good, in my view, if that European power replaced France. Perhaps Germany. This is not a reflection on the French mediators. It’s just a reflection of the fact that French domestic politics means that France is no longer so respected in Azerbaijan.

    Secondly, I think the United Nations should play a role. It would be helpful if there was a UN Security Council resolution. The UN is sending agencies now to Azerbaijan — to Karabakh. It would be good if the UN was involved. And I would also like to see a role for the European Union, which did not have a political profile 30 years ago, but now, I think, needs to play a role.

    But let’s be honest. It’s difficult now to have negotiations. This war has made relations between the two countries even more difficult. So it’s a very difficult place to start.

    RFE/RL: Armenians hope that the truce deal signed by Russia, Armenia, and Azerbaijan on November 9 is just the first step — that everything should be settled within the Minsk Group framework. For example, the status of Nagorno-Karabakh. There is nothing about it in these documents signed on November 9.

    De Waal: The statement by the [Minsk Group] co-chairs from Tirana mentioned that they want to see substantive negotiations. They also mentioned the basic principles, which means that they are still considering the status of Nagorno-Karabakh.

    I think that as far as Azerbaijan is concerned, they are no longer looking at Nagorno-Karabakh — [the former Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomous Region] NKAR — as a territorial unit. Azerbaijani units are in the south of NKAR, or in the Hadrut region, for example. So it will be very difficult, I think, to talk about the territorial autonomy of Nagorno-Karabakh. But obviously that, as far as the Armenians are concerned and as far as the Minsk Group is concerned, is the basis for negotiations. Let’s see how things go.

    I think what’s important is if both Baku and Yerevan decided it is important to have a full normalization of relations — diplomatic relations, open borders, and so on. If they both decide that that is a strategic goal that they want, then I think it is possible to start negotiating. But if each side thinks it is better to live with the status quo, with a closed border, and they’re not interested in relations, then I see it as very difficult to negotiate.

    RFE/RL: What is happening on the ground in Nagorno-Karabakh? It seems that Armenia has lost its status as a sponsor or guarantor of Nagorno-Karabakh security. Russians are in full control on one hand. But on the other hand, the Russians admit that Nagorno-Karabakh is part of Azerbaijan — as Russian President Vladimir Putin’s spokesman, Dmitry Peskov, said. We see now that Azerbaijani soldiers are even going shopping in Stepanakert. It’s an unbelievable situation. What is your interpretation of all this?

    De Waal: It’s true Russia now emphasizes that the area of de jure Nagorno-Karabakh is part of Azerbaijan. But de facto, it’s now a Russian enclave. There are Russian peacekeepers there. Russia has become the security patron, not Armenia. They’re even talking about making Russian the language of Karabakh. I guess Karabakhis already speak Russian. So yes, Karabakh is now basically under Russian control. And for Russia, it’s a strategic asset in the Caucasus which they don’t want to lose — even though they say that technically, of course, it’s part of Azerbaijan.

    RFE/RL: Do you think that the United States and other states like France can have an influence on the negotiating process — if it starts at all? It seems that U.S. President-elect Joe Biden’s incoming administration is willing to actually push through the issue of Nagorno-Karabakh’s status. And two chambers of the French parliament called on the government to recognize Nagorno-Karabakh’s declaration of independence from Azerbaijan. But the French government has said it will not do so.

    De Waal: France and the United States have less influence than they had a few months ago. Russia is very much in the center. And, of course, Russia I think might be interested in an unstable peace which justifies the presence of Russian peacekeepers on the ground. So, no peace/no war, I think, might suit the Russians better than a full peace — which would be an argument for the Russians to leave the region. So I’m sure the new Biden administration wants to do something. But they are starting from a position of weakness.

    RFE/RL: What do you think about this transport corridor through southern Armenia that is mentioned in the November 9 truce — a link between Azerbaijan’s exclave of Naxcivan and the rest of Azerbaijan? Apparently it will be controlled by the Russian military. They will set up checkpoints on that road. Is that an encroachment on Armenian sovereignty?

    De Waal: I think it’s going to be incredibly difficult for the Armenians, who are being asked to facilitate a corridor across their own territory for Turks and Azerbaijanis to use. Presumably there will also be a north-south road connecting Armenia and Iran. But I think it’s going to be incredibly difficult for Armenia to agree to this. Again, this is one more reason I think why it’s important to have negotiations on a full political agreement between Armenia and Azerbaijan — to make that corridor functional.

    RFE/RL: What is your advice to Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s government on what it should do next? Should it resign? And can we blame this colossal failure only on Pashinian? Or are previous Armenian governments also to be blamed for Armenia’s losses?

    De Waal: I think this is a bigger failure for 20 years. The failure is on both sides — [Armenia and Azerbaijan] — to negotiate a peace and negotiate a compromise. But certainly, the Armenian side and Mr. Pashinian have also not been talking compromise.

    I think it was a big mistake [for Pashinian] to continue to talk about these Azerbaijani territories [around Nagorno-Karabakh] as “liberated” territories, not occupied territories. The world regarded them as occupied territories.

    [Former Armenian Prime Minister] Serzh Sarkisian, of course, said once that [the Azerbaijani district of] Agdam “is not our homeland.” So he acknowledged that. But there’s been very little public acknowledgment of that in Armenia. But it’s from both sides, this failure. It’s a strategic failure to talk peace, which is also true from the Azerbaijani side as well. There’s been a very aggressive language all these years from Azerbaijan.

    I think it’s a big tragedy. And of course it’s a bigger tragedy now for Armenia because they have lost so much in this war.
    I don’t have any advice but to be extremely realistic about the future — that if you live with difficult neighbors you’ve got to construct an extremely realistic policy about how to do that. Don’t live with your dreams but live with your realities. I’m afraid that’s the fate of Armenians.

    RFE/RL: Do you think Pashinian should resign from his post as Armenia’s prime minister?

    De Waal: I don’t know. That’s not for me to say. Maybe what Armenia needs is new elections. And maybe Pashinian would win those elections. But it’s not for me to speak on behalf of the Armenian people. I think new elections probably would be helpful in this very difficult context for Armenia.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • Russian police have detained prominent political scientist and Kremlin critic Valery Solovei.

    Solovei was detained in St. Petersburg on December 6 near a meeting of the opposition Change movement, which he founded in October.

    Police reportedly detained him for violating a coronavirus mask mandate, Solovei said.

    Earlier, unknown provocateurs threw a smoke bomb into the crowd of Change movement supporters.

    A former professor, Solovei had worked for the Moscow State Institute of International Relations until last year when he left the elite institution for what he said were “political reasons.”

    He founded Change as a decentralized movement, taking as its model NEXTA in neighboring Belarus, which has covered and coordinated ongoing protests against authoritarian leader Alyaksandr Lukashenka.

    In September, Solovei was detained in Moscow after he and dozens of other protesters marched to show solidarity with protests in the Far Eastern city of Khabarovsk.

    With reporting by Current Time, RFE/RL’s Russian Service, and Reuters

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.