There is a great deal of intrigue, speculation and facts in the media. In this post, I will try to provide a characterization of this work, research and opinion.
On the Trail of Mr. X La Russophobe quotes a BBC Newsnight broadcast that suggests the "unnamed" figure (shall we call him "Mr. X"?) could be Aeroflot chief (and former KGB spy) Victor Ivanov.
Send Berezovsky back and we'll help with Litvinenko case, says Russia TimesOnlineUK, Tony Halpin, reports that the Kremlin has linked co-operation in solving the murder of Alexander Litvinenko with British help in extraditing exiled critics of President Putin.
FSB agents 'offered to kill' ex-spy Litvinenko, Tony Halpin, TimesOnlineUK, reports that Alexander Gusak, Alexander Litvinenko's former commander in the Organized Crime Division of the FSB, admits that the Litvinenko assassination could have been 'blood vengeance'.
Lugovoy Was Involved in Poisoning, Litvinenko Told Berezovsky before Death The Kommersant summarizes Boris Berezovsky's BBC interview, where he revealed that Alexander Litvinenko told him that Andrey Lugovoy was involved with his poisoning.
Kremlin, Inc. The New Yorker, by Micheal Spector, a comprehensive look at Putin's Russia, and what appears to be the Kremlin's standard operating procedures for managing dissent.
Why does Putin hate Russia? Larisa Alexandrovna's at-Largely blog, paints a scary picture of journalism and politics in Russia, specifically those individuals that have spoken out against the Putin’s administration, including Sergey Novikov, Valery Ivanov, Paul Klebnikov, Iskandar Khatloni, Anna Politkovskaya, Yuri Shchekochikhin, Viktor Yushchenko, Andrei Kozlov, Movladi Baisarov and Alexander Litvinenko.
Spying on possible polonium therapies Mike Nagel, in-Pharma Technologist.com, describes initiatives underway in the US, Canada and Czechoslovakia, to develop methods of protection against radiation poisoning.
Litvinenko Shooting Gallery The Kommersant article substantiates the report that Alexander Litvinenko's photograph had been used for target practice by Russian Interior Ministry's Vityaz Special Forces. The photographs are graphic.
Updated: Assessing Truth of Big Whistleblown Revelations Re: Russia, Putin, and Covert Activities Mike Woodson’s blog on TMPCafe revisits the ‘bombshells’ that Alexander Litvinenko has dropped over the last few years. He is suggesting that there are dots that need connected in the C-squared (Corruption and Conspiracy) world of international terrorism.
Litvinenko killer 'will die of poisoning within three years' Andrew Osborne, The Independent, succinctly describes the justice for those involved in the assassination of Alexander Litvinenko, death by exposure to Polonium-210.
ABC News Exclusive: Murder in a Teapot Brian Ross, ABC News, The Blotter, has put together a collection of photographs, news articles and video on the Litvinenko case. There are also links to a separate story, $1 Million Hit? The Real Deal on Polonium; and the Response to Press Speculation by Millennium & Copthorne Hotels.
Litvinenko’s Contacts Say British Media Lying About Murder Charges MOSNEWS.com has published the Russian Today television interview with Andrey Lugovoy and Dmitry Kovtun.
International Cooperation Plays a Key Role in the Litvinenko Affair A thoughtful essay by British Ambassador, Tony Brenton, in the Kommersant, describes the official Scotland Yard investigation and British judicial system. The complications arise in managing two international jurisdictions. He concludes by stating the obvious, In the investigation into this complicated matter, the British police are counting on cooperation in the future with the corresponding Russian government agencies. The ability to count on one another is in the interest of both our countries. We are also striving to expand our mutual government cooperation in the struggle against international terrorism. Only in cooperation with Russia can we build the safe and stable world that we all deserve.
January 27, 2007
January 22, 2007
Polonium-210 Levels - Update on Who is Contaminated
Category 1 [Updated March 8, 2007]
* 592 people had results ‘below reporting level' - below 30 millibecquerels (mBq) per day (natural levels of Po-210 in urine are typically in the range 5-15 mBq per day). It is therefore unlikely that any of these people had been exposed to Po-210
Category 2
* 85 people had results above 30 mBq per day in their urine, but with a dose less than 1mSv indicating no public health risk, and no health concern to the individual, but probable contact with Po-210
Category 3a
* 35 people had results above 1 millisievert (mSv), but below 6mSv indicating no public health risk, and no health concern to the individual, but probable contact with Po-210
There are 712 results in categories 1, 2 and 3a and these are NOT of health concern.
Category 3b
* 17 people had results above 6mSv which are not significant enough to result in any illness in the short term and any increased risk in the long term is likely to be very small.
Elevated Levels Polonium-210
1. Alexander Litvinenko, 2-10 millionths of a gram, that is 50-200 times the theoretical lethal dose of 50 billionths of a gram.
2. Dmitri Kovtun (hospitalized more than 1 month)
3. Andrei Lugovoi (hospitalized 3 weeks)
4. Mario Scaramella, got up to 250 billionths of a gram, five times the lethal dose
5. Marina Litvinenko
6. Dmitri Kovtun’s ex-wife (Hamburg, Germany)
7. Seven staff from the Pine Bar, The Millennium Hotel London Mayfair
8. 3-guests at the Pine Bar, The Millennium Hotel London Mayfair
9. 1-staff member at Sheraton Hotel Park Lane
10.1-staff member at the Best Western Hotel, Piccadilly
Executive Overview: Nuclear, Biological and Chemical Defense
Positive polonium test on guest
Litvinenko Investigators Say Two More Exposed to Radiation
Update on public health issues related to Polonium-210 investigation
Assessments of Doses from Measurements of Poloniuum-210 in Urine
What is Polonium-210?
* 592 people had results ‘below reporting level' - below 30 millibecquerels (mBq) per day (natural levels of Po-210 in urine are typically in the range 5-15 mBq per day). It is therefore unlikely that any of these people had been exposed to Po-210
Category 2
* 85 people had results above 30 mBq per day in their urine, but with a dose less than 1mSv indicating no public health risk, and no health concern to the individual, but probable contact with Po-210
Category 3a
* 35 people had results above 1 millisievert (mSv), but below 6mSv indicating no public health risk, and no health concern to the individual, but probable contact with Po-210
There are 712 results in categories 1, 2 and 3a and these are NOT of health concern.
Category 3b
* 17 people had results above 6mSv which are not significant enough to result in any illness in the short term and any increased risk in the long term is likely to be very small.
Elevated Levels Polonium-210
1. Alexander Litvinenko, 2-10 millionths of a gram, that is 50-200 times the theoretical lethal dose of 50 billionths of a gram.
2. Dmitri Kovtun (hospitalized more than 1 month)
3. Andrei Lugovoi (hospitalized 3 weeks)
4. Mario Scaramella, got up to 250 billionths of a gram, five times the lethal dose
5. Marina Litvinenko
6. Dmitri Kovtun’s ex-wife (Hamburg, Germany)
7. Seven staff from the Pine Bar, The Millennium Hotel London Mayfair
8. 3-guests at the Pine Bar, The Millennium Hotel London Mayfair
9. 1-staff member at Sheraton Hotel Park Lane
10.1-staff member at the Best Western Hotel, Piccadilly
Executive Overview: Nuclear, Biological and Chemical Defense
Positive polonium test on guest
Litvinenko Investigators Say Two More Exposed to Radiation
Update on public health issues related to Polonium-210 investigation
Assessments of Doses from Measurements of Poloniuum-210 in Urine
What is Polonium-210?
Who is the Real Assassin? named Vladislav...
He has been described as tall, in his early 30s, with short, cropped black hair and distinctive central Asian features.
Police match image of Litvinenko's real assassin with his death-bed description
Scotland Yard to not publicize Heathrow cameras’ pics of man they believe poisoned Litvinenko
Litvinenko was murdered by a killer with three false passports
Police match image of Litvinenko's real assassin with his death-bed description
Scotland Yard to not publicize Heathrow cameras’ pics of man they believe poisoned Litvinenko
Litvinenko was murdered by a killer with three false passports
January 20, 2007
Who Are The Russian Oligarchs?
Roman Abramovich Born 1966-Saratov, Russia. He is referred to as one of the Russian oligarchs. In March 2006 he was listed by Forbes Magazine as the richest Russian, the second richest person in Britain and the eleventh richest person in the world, with an estimated fortune of $18.2 billion. Abramovich is most famous outside of Russia as the owner of Chealsea F.C., an English Premiership football club. An orphan by the age of four, he was raised by Jewish relatives in the harsh environs of the Arctic Circle. He began his business career selling plastic ducks from a grim Moscow apartment but, within a few years, Abramovich’s vast wealth spread from oil conglomerates to pig farms, and secured his place within then-Russian President Boris Yeltsin’s inner circle. However, even today, his task force of bodyguards and armoured Mercedes testify to the high-risk nature of capitalism in post-Soviet Russia. When Putin came to power, Abramovich entered politics himself, becoming the governor of a remote, but resource-rich, Siberian region. After winning the election by 92% of the vote, he pumped investment into the region, building houses and sending thousands of schoolchildren on holiday.
Vagit Alekperov Born 1951, Fifteen years ago Alekperov was a deputy minister of fuel and energy in the U.S.S.R. Now he is the president and one of the biggest shareholders in Lukoil, the largest privately-owned oil company in Russia. But Alekperov is basically a politician, showing loyalty to Vladimir Putin on most anything, whether it be to pay more taxes or to reduce gasoline prices. Lukoil has significant interests outside of Russia, including refineries in eastern Europe and the Getty gas station chain in the U.S. Lukoil closed the biggest deal in its history in the fall of 2005 when it bought Nelson Resources in Kazakhstan for $2 billion.
Boris Berezovsky Boris Berezovsky was one of the Russian oligarchs who acquired massive wealth by taking control of state assets after the fall of communism. When Mr Berezovsky, who controlled several banks and TV stations, was accused in Russia of defrauding a regional government of US$13m, he fled and moved to London, where he now lives under the name Platon Elenin.
Vladimir Bogdonov Bogdanov, the President of Surgutneftegaz, Russia's second largest oil company. Bogdanov was born in Suyerka in 1951, a small village in the Tiumen region of west Siberia. This also was the prime location of most of Russia's oil fields. He attended the Tiumen Industrial Institute and specialized in oil and well drilling. After graduating in 1973 he went to work as a technician in the nearby oil fields of Nizhnevartovsk, Nefteyugansk and Surgut. He eventually became deputy general director of drilling in Surgutneftgaz and then general director. He remained as general director when the oil company was privatized in 1993. Unlike Lukoil, Surgutneftegaz consisted primarily of producing fields and only in 1994 did it branch out to encompass oil refineries and gasoline service stations.
Viktor Chernomyrdin Born 1938, Soviet and Russian government official. Beginning in 1957, he held positions in the Soviet national oil and gas industry, serving (1985–89) as minister in control of the nation's huge energy complex. After the 1991 collapse of the Soviet Union, Chernomyrdin supervised the transformation of the gas ministry into an enormous corporation, Gazprom. In 1992 he was brought into the Russian cabinet and, in a compromise, was chosen prime minister by Boris Yeltsin. A centrist, he initially opposed many economic changes, and gained greater power following the failure of advocates of swift economic reform to attain a parliamentary majority in 1993. Until his dismissal during an economic slump in 1998, however, he moved toward support for privatization and other reforms, and was regarded as pro-Western. In Aug., 1998, Yeltsin again sought to appoint him prime minister, but the Duma refused to approve him. In 1999, Yeltsin sent him as a special envoy to the former nation of Yugoslavia, in the midst of the Kosovo crisis, and Chernomyrdin subsequently returned to Gazprom as its chairman. He was elected to the Duma in Dec., 1999, but his Our Home Is Russia party won only 1.2% of the vote nationally. In 2001 he was appointed ambassador to Ukraine.
Oleg Deripaska Former metals trader survived the gangster wars in the aluminum industry. In the past five years he has assumed control of Russian Aluminum, the country's dominant producer. His holding company, Basic Element, now owns Russian Aluminum, automobile manufacturer GAZ, aircraft manufacturer Aviacor and insurance company Ingosstrakh. Deripaska evidently feels secure about his Russian property; instead of liquidating assets as did fellow billionaire Roman Abramovich, he is investing heavily in his Russian businesses. Acquired a huge construction company, Razvitiye, from Suleiman Kerimov last year. Married into the family of former President Yeltsin.
Mikhail Fridman Mikhail Fridman started out in business while still a student at the Moscow Institute of Steel and Alloys. He graduated in 1986 and two years later founded Alfa Eco, a trading company out of which Alfa Group Consortium developed. Fridman was born in Lvov, Ukraine on 21 April 1964. Mikhail Fridman is Chairman and principal founder of Alfa Group Consortium, one of the leading business enterprises in Russia. He has built the Alfa Group into a market leader in Banking, Energy, Telecommunications and Retail sales. Fridman chairs the Board of Directors of two of the group’s leading companies, Alfa-Bank, which is one of Russia’s largest privately owned banks, and TNK-BP, formed by the historic joint venture between British Petroleum and Tyumen Oil Company, completed in 2003. Mr. Fridman also serves as member of the Board of Directors of VimpelCom, the second of three major market leaders in the Russia’s rapidly growing mobile communications market.
Vladimir Gusinsky Born 1952, a Russian media baron, is known as the founder of Media-Most holding that included Most Bank, the NTV channel, the newspaper Segodnya and magazines. After moving abroad in the summer of 2001 he created a satellite TV broadcasting company RTVi which portrays the events in Russia as presented by the TV network Echo's journalists. The related web site newsru.com carries textual, photo and video news from Russia. He holds Israeli citizenship and often resides in Israel, where he has been under investigation for money laundering. Vladimir Gusinsky is responsible for creating the first independent TV channel in Russia as well as setting the course for professional and objective TV news coverage in Russia. The emergence of 'NTV+', an offshoot from NTV channel, was a groundbreaking event for Russian media. NTV+ was the first satellite channel ever to broadcast in the former USSR.
Mikhail Khodorkovsky Born 1964, Arrested on fraud and theft charges in October 2004, Russia's richest man languishes in a Moscow prison. The accusation: his Menatep group failed to invest $280 million, which it had promised in return for a 20% stake in the 1994 privatization of fertilizer manufacturer Apatit. Khodorkovsky denies the charges, claiming that the Kremlin is persecuting him for his mounting criticism of the Putin administration. The state froze most of his Yukos shares pending the case' outcome; until they are taken away, Forbes counts them as part of his net worth. Menatep shareholders moved to shield their stakes by transferring them to third parties. A onetime Communist Youth League activist, Khodorkovsky made a fortune in the early 1990s in banking and commodities; in 1995 bought oil giant Yukos from the state at a fraction of its market value. In 1999-2000, started bringing in Western directors, managers and auditors; made Yukos Russia's largest company by market cap.
Platon Lebedev Born 1957, Second richest Russian behind bars. Arrested four months before his partner Khodorkovsky, was charged with theft in connection with the 1994 privatization of fertilizer company Apatit. Back in 1989 was convinced by some former colleagues at the Ministry of Geology to join Bank Menatep, the centerpiece of Mikhail Khodorkovsky's burgeoning financial and commodities trading empire. Became president of the bank in the early 1990s, helped set up operations in Switzerland and other offshore tax havens. Later, as director of Group Menatep, Lebedev acted as custodian of Khodorkovsky team's assets, which include banks, fertilizers, telecoms and a majority stake in oil giant Yukos. Recently, Menatep shareholders moved to shield their stakes by transferring them to third parties.
Leonid Nevzlin Born 1960, With a warrant out for his arrest, has settled in Israel to escape the fate of his fellow Yukos shareholders, Khodorkovsky and Lebedev, both of whom are in a Moscow prison awaiting trial on theft and fraud charges. Sixteen years ago, as a 28-year-old computer programmer in Moscow, Nevzlin answered a newspaper advertisement for a job and met Mikhail Khodorkovsky; became a founding shareholder of what later become Group Menatep, the banking, trading and oil empire. Long considered Khodorkovsky's number two man, Nevzlin took care of security issues and the group's political relations. Elected senator in the Federation Council of Russia in 2001. Now leading the campaign to get his partners released and funding the political opposition to President Vladimir Putin. Along with other Menatep shareholders, recently transfered shares to third parties.
Vladimir Potanin Born 1961, With Mikhail Prokhorov, built large holding company Interros by winning over the corporate customers of two huge Soviet-era banks in 1992. Potanin and Prokhorov later took control of metals giant Norilsk Nickel and oil company Sidanco in controversial "loans-for-shares" auctions. Has variously served as a deputy prime minister of the economy and as partner to George Soros in telecom monopoly Svyazinvest. Recently stepped down from the day-to-day management of his business. Now spends much of his time and money on charities: Potanin supports students and athletes, donates to the Russian Orthodox University of St. John the Theologian, Saint-Petersburg State University, and the state TV channel Kultura. He is a trustee on two boards: the Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation and the State Hermitage Museum.
Viktor Vekselberg Born 1958, Ukrainian-born oil baron and deal junkie studied at Moscow State University of Railroad Engineering in 1970s. Through his management company, Renova, orchestrated Russia's first successful hostile takeover, of the Vladimir Tractor Factory, in 1994. Later bought medium-size aluminum smelters and bauxite mines and in 1996 united them into Sual Holding, Russia's second-largest aluminum company. Vekselberg made the bulk of his fortune when he and Mikhail Fridman's Alfa Group took over TNK, which merged with BP in 2003; it is now Russia's second-largest private oil company. Last year bought the Forbes Fabergé collection for an undisclosed sum, promising to return it to Russia, where it is now touring. Now laying low to avoid Kremlin scrutiny.
Rem Vyakhirev The son of a blacksmith from the village of Bolshaya Chernigovka in the Samara region, Vyakhirev got his start as a graduate of the Kuibyshev Polytechnical Institute.
By the age of 31, he was head of an oil stabilizing plant. He spent the next 15 years managing oil extraction companies in the Orenburg region, where he first met future boss Viktor Chernomyrdin, the long-time prime minister who helped form Gazprom from the Soviet gas industry. In 1983, Vyakhirev was called to Moscow and appointed a deputy minister for oil and gas. Six years later, he became Chernomyrdin's deputy at Gazprom, then still state-owned. Gazprom was privatised in March 1993, the same month then-President Boris Yeltsin made Chernomyrdin his prime minister, and Vyakhirev ascended to the post of Gazprom director.Rem Vyakhirev became the head of Gazprom in 1993. Board members unanimously ousted Rem Vyakhirev from his nine-year position as head of natural gas monopoly Gazprom, the world's largest gas company. Vyakhirev's fate was seen as a crucial test of President Vladimir Putin's political will to reform the Russian economy. Vyakhirev was absolute ruler at Gazprom, answerable to no one but the president. Prime Minister Chernomyrdin helped his former colleague push forward an arsenal of government decrees and resolutions aimed at limiting the sale and purchase of Gazprom shares, and concentrating control in the hands of management. The result was a joint-stock company with unrivalled restrictions imposed upon the circulation of its shares.
**************
The Boris Yeltsin government hoped to use privatization to spread ownership of shares in former state enterprises as widely as possible to create political support for his government and his reforms. The government used a system of free vouchers as a way to give mass privatization a jump-start. But it also allowed people to purchase shares of stock in privatized enterprises with cash. Even though initially each citizen received a voucher of equal face value, within months most of them converged in the hands of intermediaries who were ready to buy them for cash right away.
As the government ended the voucher privatization phase and launched cash privatization, it devised a program that it thought would simultaneously speed up privatization and yield the government a much-needed infusion of cash for its operating needs. Under the scheme, which quickly became known in the West as "loans for shares", the Yeltsin regime auctioned off substantial packages of stock shares in some of its most desirable enterprises, such as energy, telecommunications, and metallurgical firms, as collateral for bank loans.
In exchange for the loans, Yeltsin handed over assets worth many times as much. Under the terms of the deals, if the Yeltsin government did not repay the loans by September 1996, the lender acquired title to the stock and could then resell it or take an equity position in the enterprise. The first auctions were held in the fall of 1995. The auctions themselves were usually held in such a way so to limit the number of banks bidding for shares and thus to keep the auction prices extremely low. By summer 1996, major packages of shares in some of Russia's largest firms had been transferred to a small number of major banks, thus allowing a handful of powerful banks to acquire substantial ownership shares over major firms at shockingly low prices. These deals were effectively giveaways of valuable state assets to a few powerful, well-connected, and wealthy financial groups. Russian Ministry of Finance and Central Bank provided special deposits (with low interest rate) to these major banks, so that they didn't face any problem with rising money for scheme.
The concentration of immense financial and industrial power, which loans for shares had assisted, extended to the mass media. One of the most prominent of the financial barons, Boris Berezovsky, who controlled major stakes in several banks and companies, exerted an extensive influence over state television programming for a while. Berezovsky and other ultra-wealthy, well-connected tycoons who controlled these great empires of finance, industry, energy, telecommunications, and media became known as the "Russian oligarchs". Along with Berezovsky, Mikhail Khodorkovsky, Roman Abramovich, Vladimir Potanin, Vladimir Bogdanov, Rem Viakhirev, Vagit Alekperov, Viktor Chernomyrdin, Victor Vekselberg, and Mikhail Fridman emerged as Russia's most powerful and prominent oligarchs.
A tiny clique who used their connections built up during the last days of the Soviet years to appropriate Russia's vast resources during the rampant privatizations of the Yeltsin years, the oligarchs emerged as the most hated men in the nation. The Western world generally advocated a quick dismantling of the Soviet planned economy to make way for "free-market reforms," but later expressed disappointment over the newfound power and corruption of the "oligarchs."
Vagit Alekperov Born 1951, Fifteen years ago Alekperov was a deputy minister of fuel and energy in the U.S.S.R. Now he is the president and one of the biggest shareholders in Lukoil, the largest privately-owned oil company in Russia. But Alekperov is basically a politician, showing loyalty to Vladimir Putin on most anything, whether it be to pay more taxes or to reduce gasoline prices. Lukoil has significant interests outside of Russia, including refineries in eastern Europe and the Getty gas station chain in the U.S. Lukoil closed the biggest deal in its history in the fall of 2005 when it bought Nelson Resources in Kazakhstan for $2 billion.
Boris Berezovsky Boris Berezovsky was one of the Russian oligarchs who acquired massive wealth by taking control of state assets after the fall of communism. When Mr Berezovsky, who controlled several banks and TV stations, was accused in Russia of defrauding a regional government of US$13m, he fled and moved to London, where he now lives under the name Platon Elenin.
Vladimir Bogdonov Bogdanov, the President of Surgutneftegaz, Russia's second largest oil company. Bogdanov was born in Suyerka in 1951, a small village in the Tiumen region of west Siberia. This also was the prime location of most of Russia's oil fields. He attended the Tiumen Industrial Institute and specialized in oil and well drilling. After graduating in 1973 he went to work as a technician in the nearby oil fields of Nizhnevartovsk, Nefteyugansk and Surgut. He eventually became deputy general director of drilling in Surgutneftgaz and then general director. He remained as general director when the oil company was privatized in 1993. Unlike Lukoil, Surgutneftegaz consisted primarily of producing fields and only in 1994 did it branch out to encompass oil refineries and gasoline service stations.
Viktor Chernomyrdin Born 1938, Soviet and Russian government official. Beginning in 1957, he held positions in the Soviet national oil and gas industry, serving (1985–89) as minister in control of the nation's huge energy complex. After the 1991 collapse of the Soviet Union, Chernomyrdin supervised the transformation of the gas ministry into an enormous corporation, Gazprom. In 1992 he was brought into the Russian cabinet and, in a compromise, was chosen prime minister by Boris Yeltsin. A centrist, he initially opposed many economic changes, and gained greater power following the failure of advocates of swift economic reform to attain a parliamentary majority in 1993. Until his dismissal during an economic slump in 1998, however, he moved toward support for privatization and other reforms, and was regarded as pro-Western. In Aug., 1998, Yeltsin again sought to appoint him prime minister, but the Duma refused to approve him. In 1999, Yeltsin sent him as a special envoy to the former nation of Yugoslavia, in the midst of the Kosovo crisis, and Chernomyrdin subsequently returned to Gazprom as its chairman. He was elected to the Duma in Dec., 1999, but his Our Home Is Russia party won only 1.2% of the vote nationally. In 2001 he was appointed ambassador to Ukraine.
Oleg Deripaska Former metals trader survived the gangster wars in the aluminum industry. In the past five years he has assumed control of Russian Aluminum, the country's dominant producer. His holding company, Basic Element, now owns Russian Aluminum, automobile manufacturer GAZ, aircraft manufacturer Aviacor and insurance company Ingosstrakh. Deripaska evidently feels secure about his Russian property; instead of liquidating assets as did fellow billionaire Roman Abramovich, he is investing heavily in his Russian businesses. Acquired a huge construction company, Razvitiye, from Suleiman Kerimov last year. Married into the family of former President Yeltsin.
Mikhail Fridman Mikhail Fridman started out in business while still a student at the Moscow Institute of Steel and Alloys. He graduated in 1986 and two years later founded Alfa Eco, a trading company out of which Alfa Group Consortium developed. Fridman was born in Lvov, Ukraine on 21 April 1964. Mikhail Fridman is Chairman and principal founder of Alfa Group Consortium, one of the leading business enterprises in Russia. He has built the Alfa Group into a market leader in Banking, Energy, Telecommunications and Retail sales. Fridman chairs the Board of Directors of two of the group’s leading companies, Alfa-Bank, which is one of Russia’s largest privately owned banks, and TNK-BP, formed by the historic joint venture between British Petroleum and Tyumen Oil Company, completed in 2003. Mr. Fridman also serves as member of the Board of Directors of VimpelCom, the second of three major market leaders in the Russia’s rapidly growing mobile communications market.
Vladimir Gusinsky Born 1952, a Russian media baron, is known as the founder of Media-Most holding that included Most Bank, the NTV channel, the newspaper Segodnya and magazines. After moving abroad in the summer of 2001 he created a satellite TV broadcasting company RTVi which portrays the events in Russia as presented by the TV network Echo's journalists. The related web site newsru.com carries textual, photo and video news from Russia. He holds Israeli citizenship and often resides in Israel, where he has been under investigation for money laundering. Vladimir Gusinsky is responsible for creating the first independent TV channel in Russia as well as setting the course for professional and objective TV news coverage in Russia. The emergence of 'NTV+', an offshoot from NTV channel, was a groundbreaking event for Russian media. NTV+ was the first satellite channel ever to broadcast in the former USSR.
Mikhail Khodorkovsky Born 1964, Arrested on fraud and theft charges in October 2004, Russia's richest man languishes in a Moscow prison. The accusation: his Menatep group failed to invest $280 million, which it had promised in return for a 20% stake in the 1994 privatization of fertilizer manufacturer Apatit. Khodorkovsky denies the charges, claiming that the Kremlin is persecuting him for his mounting criticism of the Putin administration. The state froze most of his Yukos shares pending the case' outcome; until they are taken away, Forbes counts them as part of his net worth. Menatep shareholders moved to shield their stakes by transferring them to third parties. A onetime Communist Youth League activist, Khodorkovsky made a fortune in the early 1990s in banking and commodities; in 1995 bought oil giant Yukos from the state at a fraction of its market value. In 1999-2000, started bringing in Western directors, managers and auditors; made Yukos Russia's largest company by market cap.
Platon Lebedev Born 1957, Second richest Russian behind bars. Arrested four months before his partner Khodorkovsky, was charged with theft in connection with the 1994 privatization of fertilizer company Apatit. Back in 1989 was convinced by some former colleagues at the Ministry of Geology to join Bank Menatep, the centerpiece of Mikhail Khodorkovsky's burgeoning financial and commodities trading empire. Became president of the bank in the early 1990s, helped set up operations in Switzerland and other offshore tax havens. Later, as director of Group Menatep, Lebedev acted as custodian of Khodorkovsky team's assets, which include banks, fertilizers, telecoms and a majority stake in oil giant Yukos. Recently, Menatep shareholders moved to shield their stakes by transferring them to third parties.
Leonid Nevzlin Born 1960, With a warrant out for his arrest, has settled in Israel to escape the fate of his fellow Yukos shareholders, Khodorkovsky and Lebedev, both of whom are in a Moscow prison awaiting trial on theft and fraud charges. Sixteen years ago, as a 28-year-old computer programmer in Moscow, Nevzlin answered a newspaper advertisement for a job and met Mikhail Khodorkovsky; became a founding shareholder of what later become Group Menatep, the banking, trading and oil empire. Long considered Khodorkovsky's number two man, Nevzlin took care of security issues and the group's political relations. Elected senator in the Federation Council of Russia in 2001. Now leading the campaign to get his partners released and funding the political opposition to President Vladimir Putin. Along with other Menatep shareholders, recently transfered shares to third parties.
Vladimir Potanin Born 1961, With Mikhail Prokhorov, built large holding company Interros by winning over the corporate customers of two huge Soviet-era banks in 1992. Potanin and Prokhorov later took control of metals giant Norilsk Nickel and oil company Sidanco in controversial "loans-for-shares" auctions. Has variously served as a deputy prime minister of the economy and as partner to George Soros in telecom monopoly Svyazinvest. Recently stepped down from the day-to-day management of his business. Now spends much of his time and money on charities: Potanin supports students and athletes, donates to the Russian Orthodox University of St. John the Theologian, Saint-Petersburg State University, and the state TV channel Kultura. He is a trustee on two boards: the Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation and the State Hermitage Museum.
Viktor Vekselberg Born 1958, Ukrainian-born oil baron and deal junkie studied at Moscow State University of Railroad Engineering in 1970s. Through his management company, Renova, orchestrated Russia's first successful hostile takeover, of the Vladimir Tractor Factory, in 1994. Later bought medium-size aluminum smelters and bauxite mines and in 1996 united them into Sual Holding, Russia's second-largest aluminum company. Vekselberg made the bulk of his fortune when he and Mikhail Fridman's Alfa Group took over TNK, which merged with BP in 2003; it is now Russia's second-largest private oil company. Last year bought the Forbes Fabergé collection for an undisclosed sum, promising to return it to Russia, where it is now touring. Now laying low to avoid Kremlin scrutiny.
Rem Vyakhirev The son of a blacksmith from the village of Bolshaya Chernigovka in the Samara region, Vyakhirev got his start as a graduate of the Kuibyshev Polytechnical Institute.
By the age of 31, he was head of an oil stabilizing plant. He spent the next 15 years managing oil extraction companies in the Orenburg region, where he first met future boss Viktor Chernomyrdin, the long-time prime minister who helped form Gazprom from the Soviet gas industry. In 1983, Vyakhirev was called to Moscow and appointed a deputy minister for oil and gas. Six years later, he became Chernomyrdin's deputy at Gazprom, then still state-owned. Gazprom was privatised in March 1993, the same month then-President Boris Yeltsin made Chernomyrdin his prime minister, and Vyakhirev ascended to the post of Gazprom director.Rem Vyakhirev became the head of Gazprom in 1993. Board members unanimously ousted Rem Vyakhirev from his nine-year position as head of natural gas monopoly Gazprom, the world's largest gas company. Vyakhirev's fate was seen as a crucial test of President Vladimir Putin's political will to reform the Russian economy. Vyakhirev was absolute ruler at Gazprom, answerable to no one but the president. Prime Minister Chernomyrdin helped his former colleague push forward an arsenal of government decrees and resolutions aimed at limiting the sale and purchase of Gazprom shares, and concentrating control in the hands of management. The result was a joint-stock company with unrivalled restrictions imposed upon the circulation of its shares.
**************
The Boris Yeltsin government hoped to use privatization to spread ownership of shares in former state enterprises as widely as possible to create political support for his government and his reforms. The government used a system of free vouchers as a way to give mass privatization a jump-start. But it also allowed people to purchase shares of stock in privatized enterprises with cash. Even though initially each citizen received a voucher of equal face value, within months most of them converged in the hands of intermediaries who were ready to buy them for cash right away.
As the government ended the voucher privatization phase and launched cash privatization, it devised a program that it thought would simultaneously speed up privatization and yield the government a much-needed infusion of cash for its operating needs. Under the scheme, which quickly became known in the West as "loans for shares", the Yeltsin regime auctioned off substantial packages of stock shares in some of its most desirable enterprises, such as energy, telecommunications, and metallurgical firms, as collateral for bank loans.
In exchange for the loans, Yeltsin handed over assets worth many times as much. Under the terms of the deals, if the Yeltsin government did not repay the loans by September 1996, the lender acquired title to the stock and could then resell it or take an equity position in the enterprise. The first auctions were held in the fall of 1995. The auctions themselves were usually held in such a way so to limit the number of banks bidding for shares and thus to keep the auction prices extremely low. By summer 1996, major packages of shares in some of Russia's largest firms had been transferred to a small number of major banks, thus allowing a handful of powerful banks to acquire substantial ownership shares over major firms at shockingly low prices. These deals were effectively giveaways of valuable state assets to a few powerful, well-connected, and wealthy financial groups. Russian Ministry of Finance and Central Bank provided special deposits (with low interest rate) to these major banks, so that they didn't face any problem with rising money for scheme.
The concentration of immense financial and industrial power, which loans for shares had assisted, extended to the mass media. One of the most prominent of the financial barons, Boris Berezovsky, who controlled major stakes in several banks and companies, exerted an extensive influence over state television programming for a while. Berezovsky and other ultra-wealthy, well-connected tycoons who controlled these great empires of finance, industry, energy, telecommunications, and media became known as the "Russian oligarchs". Along with Berezovsky, Mikhail Khodorkovsky, Roman Abramovich, Vladimir Potanin, Vladimir Bogdanov, Rem Viakhirev, Vagit Alekperov, Viktor Chernomyrdin, Victor Vekselberg, and Mikhail Fridman emerged as Russia's most powerful and prominent oligarchs.
A tiny clique who used their connections built up during the last days of the Soviet years to appropriate Russia's vast resources during the rampant privatizations of the Yeltsin years, the oligarchs emerged as the most hated men in the nation. The Western world generally advocated a quick dismantling of the Soviet planned economy to make way for "free-market reforms," but later expressed disappointment over the newfound power and corruption of the "oligarchs."
Labels:
Abramovich,
Alekperov,
Berezovsky,
Bogdonov,
Chernomyrdin,
Fridman,
Gusinsky,
Khodorkorsky,
Lebedev,
Nevzlin,
Potanin,
Vekselberg,
Viakhirev
January 17, 2007
Current Headlines 4 of 12
There is a great deal of intrigue, speculation and facts in the media. In this post, I will try to provide a characterization of this work, research and opinion.
Symposium: From Russia With Death Jamie Glazov, FrontPageMagazine, assembled a distinuished panel of scholars, historians and former Soviets, including: Oleg Kalugin, Richard Pipes, Vladimir Bukovsky, Jim Woolsey, Lt. Gen. Ion Mihai Pacepa, David Satter, Yuri Yarim-Agaev, and Andrei Piontkovsky. This is a unique perspective on the Litvinenko assination.
KGB Former Agent Gordievsky Speaks of Litvinenko’s Killer Russia's Daily Online, Kommersant, reports that Scotland Yard is looking for an individual, described as a professional killer, who arrived, and left London, November 1, 2006, using three forged passports.
Quid Pro Quo in Litvinenko Probe David Nowak, The Moscow Times, describes negotiations between British detectives and Russain authorities, regarding accessibility to interview Boris Berezovsky and Akhmed Zakayev in London and Andrei Lugovoi, Dmitry Kovtum and Vyacheslav Sokolenko in Moscow.
Litvinenko And Russian Oil? The Strata-Sphere, A. J. Strata speculates why the Russian Oligarchs want President Putin out of office before 2008. Strata makes the analogy between YUKOS and ENRON, describing the governments’ prosecution strategy of getting the small fry to turn evidence on the higher ups in a classic law enforcement pincer move.
Litvinenko And Scaramella. Or Should That Read ‘Scammerama’? Atlantic Free Press, article by Copy Dude, compares Mario Scaramella (the consummate con man) with Alexander Litvinenko (the dirt-peddler de-luxe). Copy Dude provides links, connecting Scaramella and Litvinenko with the Mitrokhin Commission, Romano Prodi, and Yevgeny Limarev.
Another dead Russian Larisa Alexandrovna, in her blog at-Largely, announces that she is “officially off of the Litvinenko case.” She concludes by describing the coincidence-conspiracy scenario, chronologically linking the assignations of Anna Politkovskaya (10/07/2006), Igor Ponomarev (10/30/2006), Alexander Litvinenko (11/23/2006) and Yuri Golubev (01/07/2007).
Russia Under Terror Threat - Is This The Reason For Po-210? A.J. Strata, Strata-Sphere, reports on information Russia has received from foreign sources, regarding terrorists’ plans to strike a Russian transportation system. Strata describes a scenario where the supply of Polonium-210, used to kill Alexander Litvinenko, which has a half-life of 138.39 days, is rapidly deteriorating, and may be used by the Chechen terrorists as a nuclear dirty bomb.
The Secret Life of Mario Scaramella, What a bit player in the case of the radioactive Russian tells us about Berlusconi's Italy. Slate Magazine’s Alexander Stille, develops a colorful biography for Mario Scaramella, concluding that the Litvinenko-Scaramella connection offers, along with a glimpse at the murky world of former Soviet spies, is a picture of Berlusconi's Italy, in which bogus scandals are manufactured in order to distract attention from real issues.
Who Killed Alexander Litvinenko? A Real-Life Deadly Spy Mystery CBS 60 Minutes Bob Simon provides a major news story on a “Real-Life Deadly Spy Mystery”. The article includes video links to the original news story.
Symposium: From Russia With Death Jamie Glazov, FrontPageMagazine, assembled a distinuished panel of scholars, historians and former Soviets, including: Oleg Kalugin, Richard Pipes, Vladimir Bukovsky, Jim Woolsey, Lt. Gen. Ion Mihai Pacepa, David Satter, Yuri Yarim-Agaev, and Andrei Piontkovsky. This is a unique perspective on the Litvinenko assination.
KGB Former Agent Gordievsky Speaks of Litvinenko’s Killer Russia's Daily Online, Kommersant, reports that Scotland Yard is looking for an individual, described as a professional killer, who arrived, and left London, November 1, 2006, using three forged passports.
Quid Pro Quo in Litvinenko Probe David Nowak, The Moscow Times, describes negotiations between British detectives and Russain authorities, regarding accessibility to interview Boris Berezovsky and Akhmed Zakayev in London and Andrei Lugovoi, Dmitry Kovtum and Vyacheslav Sokolenko in Moscow.
Litvinenko And Russian Oil? The Strata-Sphere, A. J. Strata speculates why the Russian Oligarchs want President Putin out of office before 2008. Strata makes the analogy between YUKOS and ENRON, describing the governments’ prosecution strategy of getting the small fry to turn evidence on the higher ups in a classic law enforcement pincer move.
Litvinenko And Scaramella. Or Should That Read ‘Scammerama’? Atlantic Free Press, article by Copy Dude, compares Mario Scaramella (the consummate con man) with Alexander Litvinenko (the dirt-peddler de-luxe). Copy Dude provides links, connecting Scaramella and Litvinenko with the Mitrokhin Commission, Romano Prodi, and Yevgeny Limarev.
Another dead Russian Larisa Alexandrovna, in her blog at-Largely, announces that she is “officially off of the Litvinenko case.” She concludes by describing the coincidence-conspiracy scenario, chronologically linking the assignations of Anna Politkovskaya (10/07/2006), Igor Ponomarev (10/30/2006), Alexander Litvinenko (11/23/2006) and Yuri Golubev (01/07/2007).
Russia Under Terror Threat - Is This The Reason For Po-210? A.J. Strata, Strata-Sphere, reports on information Russia has received from foreign sources, regarding terrorists’ plans to strike a Russian transportation system. Strata describes a scenario where the supply of Polonium-210, used to kill Alexander Litvinenko, which has a half-life of 138.39 days, is rapidly deteriorating, and may be used by the Chechen terrorists as a nuclear dirty bomb.
The Secret Life of Mario Scaramella, What a bit player in the case of the radioactive Russian tells us about Berlusconi's Italy. Slate Magazine’s Alexander Stille, develops a colorful biography for Mario Scaramella, concluding that the Litvinenko-Scaramella connection offers, along with a glimpse at the murky world of former Soviet spies, is a picture of Berlusconi's Italy, in which bogus scandals are manufactured in order to distract attention from real issues.
Who Killed Alexander Litvinenko? A Real-Life Deadly Spy Mystery CBS 60 Minutes Bob Simon provides a major news story on a “Real-Life Deadly Spy Mystery”. The article includes video links to the original news story.
January 6, 2007
YUKOS Oil Company - is it the common link?
Khodorkovsky Press Center As a global representative of Russian business, Mikhail Khodorkovsky recognized his responsibility to participate in the creation of a Russian civil society. Knowing that business often serves as a catalyst for change, Mr. Khodorkovsky's vision made YUKOS a leader in corporate governance, transparency and philanthropy. Prior to heading YUKOS, Mr. Khodorkovsky was the CEO of Rosprom, an investment company that managed the transition of more than one hundred large manufacturers from the Soviet economic model to free enterprise.
Mikhail Khodorkovsky is best known as YUKOS Oil's visionary leader. He was the first Russian CEO to adopt Western financial practices and corporate governance accountability, transforming YUKOS into Russia's leading oil company. Khodorkovsky's vision goes beyond business, however. He used his wealth to advance democratic, philanthropic and civic projects across Russia. He is unique among Russia's "oligarchs" for his strong passion for democracy and his courage - some might call it foolhardiness - in challenging Kremlin control over society. It was Khodorkovsky's natural interest in politics - including support for liberal parties prior to the 2002 Duma elections - that ultimately stirred the Kremlin's ire.
Planton Lebedev Press Center Platon Lebedev is the former director of Group MENATEP, the controlling shareholder of YUKOS Oil Company.
YUKOS Oil Company
YUKOS Minority Shareholder Coalition
YUKOS employees arrested or sanctioned for arrest include:
Igor Agafonov
Elena Agranovskaya
Aleksei Aleksandrov
Vasily Alexanyan
Pavel Anisimov
Svetlana Bakhmina
Sergei Baldikov
Yuri Beylin
Mikhail Brudno, Forbes Magazine 20/100
Ramil Burganov, granted political asylum in U.K.
Irina Chernikova
Natalya Chernisheva, living in U.K.
Mikhail Dodonov
Vladimir Dubov, Forbes Magazine 21/100
Mikhail Elfimov
Tagirzian Gilmanov
Dmitri Gololobov, living in U.K.
Irina Golub
Aleksei Golubovich, Forbes Magazine 81/100
Igor Goncharov
Aleksandr Gorbachev, granted political asylum in U.K.
Aleksandr Ivannikov
Pavel Iviev
Vladislav Kartashov
Mikhail Khodorkovsky, Forbes Magazine 01/100
Ivan Kolesnikov
Andrei Krainov
Aleksei Kurtzin
Dadim Lazarenko
Dmitri Lazarenkov
Platon Lebedev, Forbes Magazine 22/100
Vladimir Malakhovsky
Vladimir Malin
Elena Marochkina
Dmitri Maruev, living in U.K.
Bruce Misamore
Leonid Nevzlin, Forbes Magazine 18/100
Tim Osborne
Vladimir Pereverzin
Alexei Pichugin
Dmitri Schenski
Vasily Shakhnovsky, Forbes Magazine 23/100
Sergei Shimkevich
Ludmila Slyusareva
Aleksei Spiricher
Aleksandr Temerko, living in U.K.
Steven Theede
Mikhail Trushin
Antonio Valdes-Garcia
Dmitri Velichko
Oleg Vitka
Kostantin Vorotnikov
Nikolai Yumin
Yuri Yuminov
Anton Zakharov
Vladimir Zvantzev
Constitutional and Due Process Violations in the Khodorkovsky/YUKOS Case
Harvard Business School Case Study
Recent News Stories
Leonid Nevzlin Gets Polonium and Mercury
YUKOS Ex-Executive Back in Russia to Testify against Khodorkovsky
Khodorkovsky Accomplice Makes a Break
Litvinenko And Russian Oil?
Russia Suspects Yukos Co-founder’s Death in London Was Murder
Photographs 4 of 4
Here are photographs of names that keep coming up in the investigation of Alexander Litvinenko's murder, or victims of previous poisonings and suspicious deaths. To read the biographies of these individuals, click on their names.
Elena Collongues-Popova Elena Collongues-Popova Born-1954, Russia, she worked for years in silence, as the financial architect of parts of the early empire built by Mikhail B. Khodorkovsky, who controlled Yukos, the giant Russian oil company. But she has since turned on Khodorkovsky after French tax police fined her roughly $15 million over actions she said she undertook on behalf of his early business dealings. In 2005 she met with Yevgeny Limarev and Roger Kinsbourg in Paris, trying to obtain information about Alexei Golubovich, particularly bribes that he might have paid to Lithuanian officials to get control of the state-owned Maziekiu Nafta oil refinery. [photo by Lucy Komisar, thekomisarscoop.com]
Yuri Golubev Born 1941-Russia, during the period 1970-1990 Golubev worked at the Ministry of Foreign Trade in the Soviet Union. In 1990 he started to work in oil business. Later from 2000 to 2005 Golubev co-founded Yukos. He headed up the company before Mikhail Khodorkovsky, and the company's growth is connected with his name. Golubev was found dead in his London apartment January 7, 2007. The reason of his death is supposed to be heart failure, though founders of the Menatep group, are suspect of this diagnosis.
Alexei Golubovich Born 1965, Russia, Golubovich held the posts of head of planning at the Menatep Group and of deputy chairman of the board at Menatep Bank prior to 1996. In the years 1998 to 2000 he worked as head of strategic planning and corporate finance at the Yukos oil company. He left Russia for Great Britain in 2003 fearing arrest at home. Currently, Golubovich holds the post of the chairman of board of directors at JSC Russian Investors. Russian prosecutors believe Golubovich played a key role in financial wrongdoing at Yukos and Menatep. Along with Yukos founders Mikhail Khodorkovsky and Platon Lebedev, currently serving lengthy jail terms in Russia, Golubovich is charged with money laundering and concealing illegally derived income abroad.
Alexander Konanykhine Born-1967 Russia, He blew the whistle on the corrupt, KGB-sponsored figures plundering Russia, particularly the banking industry. Konanykhine fled to the US in 1992. Initially he asked the FBI and the Russian government to investigate his former business, the All-Russian Exchange Bank, which had been seized from him by KGB-connected Russian mobsters. The FBI informed Konanykhine in 1995 that the Russian mob had issued a contract on his life. However, shortly after that warning, the FBI began collaborating in a Russian-based investigation of him on charges of embezzlement. In June 1996, officials from the Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS), in a joint operation with agents of the renamed KGB, arrested Konanykhine and raided his apartment in Washington's Watergate complex. The KGB accused him of falsifying his employment history, thereby invalidating his visa. This cleared the way for Konanykhine's expulsion to Russia, where he faced imprisonment, torture and death. Cozy With the KGB, by Wm. N. Grigg, The New American, September 29, 1997
Platon Lebedev Born-1956, Russia, he is the former director of Group MENATEP, the controlling shareholder of YUKOS Oil Company. He was arrested July 2003 on charges of fraud and tax evasion in relation to the privatization of Apatit, a fertilizer business. He was found guilty and is currently serving an 8-year sentence in a maximum security prison in the Polar Ural region of Siberia.
Igor Ponomarev Born 1941-Russia, representative of Russia in the International Maritime Organization (IMO), died in London October 30, 2006, after he collapsed at home after a night at the opera. Ponomarev was attending a theatre performance when suddenly felt badly, and a friend revealed he had been “gasping for water” — a symptom of radiation poisoning. A heart attack was declared the reason of his death, though Ponomarev had no autopsy in the UK, due diplomatic status, and his body was quickly flown to Russia. Ponomarev’s family was shocked, as they were not aware of any heart problems. Experts believe the thirst was consistent with poisoning by polonium-210, the radioactive substance that killed Alexander Litvinenko, on November 23, 2006. Ponomarev’s death came hours before he was due to meet former KGB agent Litvinenko’s Italian contact Mario Scaramella, with whom he wanted to go to the appointment with the Russian ex-security officer.
Elena Collongues-Popova Elena Collongues-Popova Born-1954, Russia, she worked for years in silence, as the financial architect of parts of the early empire built by Mikhail B. Khodorkovsky, who controlled Yukos, the giant Russian oil company. But she has since turned on Khodorkovsky after French tax police fined her roughly $15 million over actions she said she undertook on behalf of his early business dealings. In 2005 she met with Yevgeny Limarev and Roger Kinsbourg in Paris, trying to obtain information about Alexei Golubovich, particularly bribes that he might have paid to Lithuanian officials to get control of the state-owned Maziekiu Nafta oil refinery. [photo by Lucy Komisar, thekomisarscoop.com]
Yuri Golubev Born 1941-Russia, during the period 1970-1990 Golubev worked at the Ministry of Foreign Trade in the Soviet Union. In 1990 he started to work in oil business. Later from 2000 to 2005 Golubev co-founded Yukos. He headed up the company before Mikhail Khodorkovsky, and the company's growth is connected with his name. Golubev was found dead in his London apartment January 7, 2007. The reason of his death is supposed to be heart failure, though founders of the Menatep group, are suspect of this diagnosis.
Alexei Golubovich Born 1965, Russia, Golubovich held the posts of head of planning at the Menatep Group and of deputy chairman of the board at Menatep Bank prior to 1996. In the years 1998 to 2000 he worked as head of strategic planning and corporate finance at the Yukos oil company. He left Russia for Great Britain in 2003 fearing arrest at home. Currently, Golubovich holds the post of the chairman of board of directors at JSC Russian Investors. Russian prosecutors believe Golubovich played a key role in financial wrongdoing at Yukos and Menatep. Along with Yukos founders Mikhail Khodorkovsky and Platon Lebedev, currently serving lengthy jail terms in Russia, Golubovich is charged with money laundering and concealing illegally derived income abroad.
Alexander Konanykhine Born-1967 Russia, He blew the whistle on the corrupt, KGB-sponsored figures plundering Russia, particularly the banking industry. Konanykhine fled to the US in 1992. Initially he asked the FBI and the Russian government to investigate his former business, the All-Russian Exchange Bank, which had been seized from him by KGB-connected Russian mobsters. The FBI informed Konanykhine in 1995 that the Russian mob had issued a contract on his life. However, shortly after that warning, the FBI began collaborating in a Russian-based investigation of him on charges of embezzlement. In June 1996, officials from the Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS), in a joint operation with agents of the renamed KGB, arrested Konanykhine and raided his apartment in Washington's Watergate complex. The KGB accused him of falsifying his employment history, thereby invalidating his visa. This cleared the way for Konanykhine's expulsion to Russia, where he faced imprisonment, torture and death. Cozy With the KGB, by Wm. N. Grigg, The New American, September 29, 1997
Platon Lebedev Born-1956, Russia, he is the former director of Group MENATEP, the controlling shareholder of YUKOS Oil Company. He was arrested July 2003 on charges of fraud and tax evasion in relation to the privatization of Apatit, a fertilizer business. He was found guilty and is currently serving an 8-year sentence in a maximum security prison in the Polar Ural region of Siberia.
Igor Ponomarev Born 1941-Russia, representative of Russia in the International Maritime Organization (IMO), died in London October 30, 2006, after he collapsed at home after a night at the opera. Ponomarev was attending a theatre performance when suddenly felt badly, and a friend revealed he had been “gasping for water” — a symptom of radiation poisoning. A heart attack was declared the reason of his death, though Ponomarev had no autopsy in the UK, due diplomatic status, and his body was quickly flown to Russia. Ponomarev’s family was shocked, as they were not aware of any heart problems. Experts believe the thirst was consistent with poisoning by polonium-210, the radioactive substance that killed Alexander Litvinenko, on November 23, 2006. Ponomarev’s death came hours before he was due to meet former KGB agent Litvinenko’s Italian contact Mario Scaramella, with whom he wanted to go to the appointment with the Russian ex-security officer.
Labels:
Collongues-Popova,
Golubev,
Golubovich,
Konanikhine,
Lebedev,
Ponomarev
January 3, 2007
Current Headlines 3 of 12
There is a great deal of intrigue, speculation and facts in the media. In this post, I will try to provide a characterization of this work, research and opinion. For example, one article states, "We're actually facing a national security nightmare: someone has demonstrated the capability to use radiological weapons on the streets of London and we don't know who they are."
Odd links in Litvinenko smear The Aftenposten (Norway) uncovers an exclusive new twist in the mystery around the death of Russian ex-spy Alexander Litvinenko. The article reports that Julia Svetlichnaya accused Litvinenko of possessing secret documents that he intended to use to blackmail prominent Russian politicians and businessmen.
Poisoned Russian linked to investigation of possible bribes by ex-Yukos official Lucy Komisar, The Komisar Scoop, introduces the reader to the Alexei Golubovich - Elena Collongues-Popova - Alexande Litvinenko conspiracy theory. The article questions whether Svetlichnaya’s interest in Litvinenko might have been more than coincidental. She was communication manager for Golubovich’s company, Russian Investors.
The Polonium 210 Trail Reaches America The Strata Sphere (A. J. Strata) introduces the concept of Litvinenko’s poisoning as evidence of a dirty bomb. He suggests that we consider it was an accident in handling and not an assassination attempt. He concludes that if the material has been shown to have reached our shores, it is long past time the news media stopped obsessing with the assassination theory and pursue the alternative dirty bomb smuggling theory.
Litvinenko: Kremlin Conspiracy or Blofeld Set-Up? A subjective evaluation by Dimitri K. Simes, National Interest online, he develops the case for avoiding premature assumptions by systematically analyzing each of the three main theories: the Kremlin plot, a movie plot, and Litvinenko’s business model.
Litvinenko's killers used polonium worth $10m to give massive overdose Daniel McGrory and Tony Halpin, Times Online, analyze the Litvinenko evidence, developing leads, based on the evidence: a dose ten times the lethal level and $10 million value of the Polonium-210 used.
Outside View: Dirty bomb trial run? Tatyana Sinitsyna, UPI Commentator presents an alternative theory, as developed by nuclear physicist Alexander Borovoi, "The worst part of the story is that it was like a rehearsal for a dirty bomb. The incident shows that something dangerous is cooking in the terrorist kitchen, with menacing ideas and plans that can generally be described as a crime."
Litvinenko Analysis: Realist Leaves Out Key Factors Mike Woodson, TPM Cafe blog, develops seven different Litvinenko theories, concluding that the case is also about whether a regime that allows the loose use of radioactive materials as weapons in and against the interests of NATO countries should be brought to the mat with a concerted world effort aimed at its international accountability.
Was ex-spy trying to sell dirty bomb? James Murray, The Daily Express, introduces an extremist theory with al Qaeda terrorist implications, due to Litvinenko’s sympathies with Chechen rebels and secretive conversion to Islam.
Litvinenko murder may be linked to mystery Russian poisonings Jonathan Calvert and Pazit Ravina, Timesonline, report that prosecutors in Moscow are investigating the possibility that Litvinenko’s murder is linked to two unsolved poisonings involving prominent Russian businessmen: Roman Tsepov and Alexei Golubovich. Both men were embroiled in the multi-billion-pound battle over Yukos, the Russian oil company, before its assets were taken back into state control by the Kremlin. In August Golubovich gave an interview accusing Leonid Nevzlin, the former co-owner of Yukos, of being behind the attempts.
Did the Russian Mafia Kill Alexander Litvinenko? Looks like it… Justin Raimondo, Antiwar.com blog, presents another theory, identifying Russian oligarch Boris Berezovsky as the common link. He suggests that the story being put out by the Berezovsky spin machine "just doesn't add up."
Russians investigate Yukos officials Litvinenko's poisoning Harold Tribune, Steven L. Myers, reports on the possible connection of Leonid Nevzlin and Yukos in the Litvinenko case.
Odd links in Litvinenko smear The Aftenposten (Norway) uncovers an exclusive new twist in the mystery around the death of Russian ex-spy Alexander Litvinenko. The article reports that Julia Svetlichnaya accused Litvinenko of possessing secret documents that he intended to use to blackmail prominent Russian politicians and businessmen.
Poisoned Russian linked to investigation of possible bribes by ex-Yukos official Lucy Komisar, The Komisar Scoop, introduces the reader to the Alexei Golubovich - Elena Collongues-Popova - Alexande Litvinenko conspiracy theory. The article questions whether Svetlichnaya’s interest in Litvinenko might have been more than coincidental. She was communication manager for Golubovich’s company, Russian Investors.
The Polonium 210 Trail Reaches America The Strata Sphere (A. J. Strata) introduces the concept of Litvinenko’s poisoning as evidence of a dirty bomb. He suggests that we consider it was an accident in handling and not an assassination attempt. He concludes that if the material has been shown to have reached our shores, it is long past time the news media stopped obsessing with the assassination theory and pursue the alternative dirty bomb smuggling theory.
Litvinenko: Kremlin Conspiracy or Blofeld Set-Up? A subjective evaluation by Dimitri K. Simes, National Interest online, he develops the case for avoiding premature assumptions by systematically analyzing each of the three main theories: the Kremlin plot, a movie plot, and Litvinenko’s business model.
Litvinenko's killers used polonium worth $10m to give massive overdose Daniel McGrory and Tony Halpin, Times Online, analyze the Litvinenko evidence, developing leads, based on the evidence: a dose ten times the lethal level and $10 million value of the Polonium-210 used.
Outside View: Dirty bomb trial run? Tatyana Sinitsyna, UPI Commentator presents an alternative theory, as developed by nuclear physicist Alexander Borovoi, "The worst part of the story is that it was like a rehearsal for a dirty bomb. The incident shows that something dangerous is cooking in the terrorist kitchen, with menacing ideas and plans that can generally be described as a crime."
Litvinenko Analysis: Realist Leaves Out Key Factors Mike Woodson, TPM Cafe blog, develops seven different Litvinenko theories, concluding that the case is also about whether a regime that allows the loose use of radioactive materials as weapons in and against the interests of NATO countries should be brought to the mat with a concerted world effort aimed at its international accountability.
Was ex-spy trying to sell dirty bomb? James Murray, The Daily Express, introduces an extremist theory with al Qaeda terrorist implications, due to Litvinenko’s sympathies with Chechen rebels and secretive conversion to Islam.
Litvinenko murder may be linked to mystery Russian poisonings Jonathan Calvert and Pazit Ravina, Timesonline, report that prosecutors in Moscow are investigating the possibility that Litvinenko’s murder is linked to two unsolved poisonings involving prominent Russian businessmen: Roman Tsepov and Alexei Golubovich. Both men were embroiled in the multi-billion-pound battle over Yukos, the Russian oil company, before its assets were taken back into state control by the Kremlin. In August Golubovich gave an interview accusing Leonid Nevzlin, the former co-owner of Yukos, of being behind the attempts.
Did the Russian Mafia Kill Alexander Litvinenko? Looks like it… Justin Raimondo, Antiwar.com blog, presents another theory, identifying Russian oligarch Boris Berezovsky as the common link. He suggests that the story being put out by the Berezovsky spin machine "just doesn't add up."
Russians investigate Yukos officials Litvinenko's poisoning Harold Tribune, Steven L. Myers, reports on the possible connection of Leonid Nevzlin and Yukos in the Litvinenko case.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)