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Russia
Reform Monitor
No. 1541, March 12, 2008
American Foreign Policy Council, Washington, DC
Notorious
Russian arms dealer Bout apprehended; Anti-corruption, Kremlin style
Editor: Jonas
Bernstein
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March 7:
The
New York Times reports that Viktor Bout, a Russian businessman viewed by
U.S. authorities as one of the world’s most notorious arms dealers, has been
arrested in Thailand as part of a U.S.-led sting operation and charged in the
U.S. with conspiracy for trying to smuggle missiles and rocket launchers to
Colombia’s FARC rebels. Bout is suspected of supplying weapons to the Taliban
and Al Qaeda and using his own private air fleet to supply arms to various
African civil wars.
March 8:
Russian President Vladimir Putin has told visiting German Chancellor Angela
Merkel that his successor Dmitry Medvedev will defend Russia’s interests as
aggressively as he has,
Bloomberg News reports. Medvedev “will be free to demonstrate his liberal
views, but he isn’t any less of a Russian nationalist, in the positive sense of
the word, than I am,” Putin said in a press conference he and Merkel held after
meeting at the presidential residence in Novo-Ogaryovo outside Moscow. Following
her talks with Putin, Merkel met with Medvedev.
March 11:
President Putin has suggested chopping off corrupt officials’ hands,
Agence France-Presse reports. “It would be good to cut off the hand, as they
used to in the Middle Ages,” Russian news agencies quoted Putin as saying during
a meeting with parliamentary leaders. According to AFP, Putin made the comment
while responding to one of the meeting’s attendees, Communist Party leader
Gennady Zyuganov, who complained that “just to build 100 apartments you have to
run around for 24 hours looking for permits and greasing hands.” Putin responded
that “all you’d have to do” is cut off a corrupt official’s hand and “that hand
would immediately stop reaching for bribes.”
"Yabloko" leader Grigory Yavlinsky has held a one-on-one meeting with President
Putin in the Kremlin and asked him to help secure the release of Maxim Reznik,
the leader of "Yabloko’s" St. Petersburg chapter who was arrested on March 2nd
for allegedly insulting and striking a policeman.
Radio Free
Europe's Russian service, citing "Yabloko’s" press service, reports that
Yavlinsky questioned the charges against Reznik and Putin promised to look into
the situation. Human rights activists and "Yabloko" members say the case against
Reznik was fabricated and have been picketing prosecutor’s offices in St.
Petersburg and Moscow.
Russia’s envoy to NATO, Dmitry Rogozin, has warned that putting Georgia on track
to join the alliance would deepen the divides within Georgia and bolster the
bids of two of its separatist regions, Abkhazia and South Ossetia, for
international recognition. “Russia is trying to persuade the NATO members, first
of all the Americans, that they shouldn't joke around — not just with Georgia
but with the whole perspective for the future of NATO,” Rogozin
told the Associated Press. “The question is whether they hear us or not.”
According to the news agency, NATO is expected to consider next month offering
Georgia an official route to alliance membership.
March 12:
Russia has condemned “double standards” in the U.S. State Department’s annual
human rights report.
According to Reuters, the report details abuses in Russia in 2007, including
the harassment of media and alleged killings and torture by security forces, and
criticizes the Kremlin for centralizing power and restricting opposition
parties. “It is obvious the human rights issue is being distributed for external
and internal consumption,” Russia’s Foreign Ministry said in a statement. “How
else can one explain the fact that the United States, having de facto legalized
torture and handing capital punishment to minors, denying responsibility for war
crimes and massive human rights abuses in Iraq and Afghanistan... gives a
distorted interpretation of the situation in other countries?” |
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(c) 2008, American Foreign Policy Council.
All Rights Reserved. |
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