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"Sovest" Group Campaign for Granting Political Prisoner Status to Mikhail Khodorkovsky

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Tuesday, May 31, 2005

Yukos ex-chief jailed for 9 years




Former Yukos chief Mikhail Khodorkovsky has been jailed for nine years after being found guilty of six charges including tax evasion.

But his ordeal may not be at an end as Russian prosecutors have said they will soon bring fresh charges against him.

The news came as Mr Khodorkovsky was found guilty of six of the seven charges of tax evasion, fraud and embezzlement he had faced.

Meanwhile, his lawyers said he would take his appeal to Europe.

As well as appealing against the ruling at Russia's Supreme Court, Mr Khordokovsky will take the case to the European Court of Human Rights, they added.

US President George W Bush said that he had expressed concerns to Moscow that Mr Khodorkovsky was judged guilty before even standing trial.

He added that the US would watch the case as it continued.

Hard time


Mr Khodorkovsky is actually expected to serve seven-and-a-half years in jail as the court said his prison term should be reduced because of the amount of time served on remand since his arrest in 2003.

He will serve his time at a medium security prison camp.

But in a statement read out by his lawyer he pledged to continue his public activities behind bars.

It added he would set up "charitable foundations" to support Russian poetry and philosophy and set up a union for Russian inmates.

During the 11-month trial, the court did drop one charge against Mr Khodorkovsky - relating to his 1994 acquisition of fertiliser company Apatit - as it fell outside the Russian justice system's 10-year statute of limitations.

His business partner Platon Lebedev was also jailed for nine years on the same charges; a third co-defendant, Andrei Krainov, was given a five-and-a-half year suspended sentence.

'Harsh' sentence


Mr Khodorkovsky and Mr Lebedev were also ordered to pay 17bn roubles (£330m; $600m) in taxes and penalties.

"I think [the sentence] is a testament to Basmanny justice," Mr Khodorkovsky told the court. Basmanny, the name of the court where the Yukos hearings began, has become a byword among his supporters for corrupt justice.

Commentators said that the sentence - just one year lower than the maximum that could be imposed - was a harsh one.

Outside the court, US Democrat congressman Tom Lantos said: "It seems that this political trial before a kangaroo court has come to a shameful conclusion.

"It is obvious that the conclusion of the trial was pre-determined politically and Mr Khodorkovsky could have been left at home and the trial could have been conducted without the prison circus."

Politically motivated


Mr Khodorkovsky's supporters have claimed that the trial was politically motivated punishment from the Kremlin in response to his financing of pro-Western opposition political parties.

Khodorkovsky supporters outside Moscow court
Mr Khodorkovsky's supporters have been demanding his freedom

"The sentence had to be long enough so Khodorkovsky was in jail in 2008, at the next presidential elections," political analyst Marsha Lipman at the Carnegie Moscow Centre added.

"There will be a lot of criticism in the West, no question about it."

However the Russian prosecutor's office "categorically denied" that the case was politically motivated.

"Specific serious crimes were committed and have been proved. Astronomical sums were stolen," spokeswoman Natalia Vishnyakova said.

Countersuit


The charges against him go back to Russia's hasty privatisation programme in the 1990s under which Mr Khodorkovsky was able to form Yukos, formerly Russia's largest oil company.

Since Mr Khodorkovsky has been behind bars, Russian authorities have broken up Yukos after hitting it with a bill for $28bn in back taxes.

Yukos, meanwhile, has sued the Russian government for 324bn roubles, arguing that it is due compensation for the break-up, which saw its main production unit sold off to a competitor.

The company says the break-up will eventually ruin it.

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Ex-Yukos CEO Khodorkovsky sentenced to 9 yrs for fraud, tax evasion

he founder and former CEO of Russian oil major Yukos, Mikhail Khodorkovsky, was found guilty of fraud and tax evasion and sentenced to nine years in prison, a court heard.

The sentence was one year short of the maximum penalty sought by the state prosecution.

Chief Justice Irina Kolesnikova said the decision by a three-judge panel could be appealed to a higher judicial authority within 10 days.

Khodorkovsky's defence team has said they would file such an appeal in the event of such a verdict and sentence - not just through the Russian courts but possibly at the European Court of Human Rights and through an international campaign of pressure against President Vladimir Putin's government.

Co-defendant Platon Lebedev, one of Khodorkovsky's former business associates, was found guilty of the same offences and also sentenced to nine years.

The pair were convicted under all six of the articles in the Russian criminal code under which charges were filed against them.

The trial, which began last June, has sparked widespread international criticism and shaken investor confidence in the country.

His supporters say Khodorkovsky is no worse than the other so-called 'oligarchs,' the less than two dozen men who rose to the top of Russia's chaotic post-Soviet move towards privatization.

Defenders also underlined that under Khodorkovsky, Yukos became known in the West as Russia's most transparent and well-run company.

Many analysts said his main mistake was to become actively involved in politics, funding opposition parties and, with his wealth and influence abroad, posing a threat to Putin's grip on power.

Yukos was crippled by a government-imposed 28 bln usd back-tax bill, and and its chief oil production unit is now owned by state-controlled Rosneft.

While expectation was high that a formal verdict would come this week, the vows to appeal, as well as a threat of new money laundering charges, mean the saga will go on.

The verdict hearing has already taken two weeks, with justices led by Irina Kolesnikova reading from a judgement hundreds of pages long, and on some days working less than three hours.


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Tuesday, May 24, 2005

Judges Read Verdict Faster on 6th Day

By Lyuba Pronina
Staff Writer

Judges in the Mikhail Khodorkovsky trial picked up their snail's-pace reading of the verdict Monday, speeding through up to 150 pages.

Outside the courthouse, a protest by Khodorkovsky's supporters was moved 70 meters down the street to make way for large-scale road repairs, which had sprung up over the weekend.

"If the judges continue at today's pace, I do not rule out that the verdict will be finished by the end of the week," Khodorkovsky's lawyer Genrikh Padva told reporters outside the courthouse.

Padva said that as many as 150 pages were read out Monday, the first full day in six days of reading the verdict, in sharp contrast to about 50 pages in three hours per day last week.

The marathon verdict -- believed to be the longest in the country's post-Soviet history -- has been described as farcical and a Kremlin-inspired effort to string out proceedings so that public interest in the case wanes.

The trial of former Yukos CEO Khodorkovsky and his business partner Platon Lebedev, on charges of fraud, tax evasion and embezzlement has been widely seen as the Kremlin's revenge for Khodorkovsky crossing swords with President Vladimir Putin over business and politics. Prosecutors have demanded the maximum 10 years in prison for both men.

Khodorkovsky's lawyers said that many of the events described by the judges in the verdict had either not taken place or had no relevance to their clients.

From the defendants' cage in the courtroom, Khodorkovsky doodled in a notepad, drawing a series of five-pointed stars and a square, occasionally communicating to his wife, Inna, with gestures. Lebedev exchanged notes with his lawyer Yelena Levina, who later said the notes were comments on the judges' reading of the verdict.

Opposite the courthouse, where last week pro- and anti-Khodorkovsky groups demonstrated, more than 20 pieces of heavy-duty road repair machinery stood. The area was fenced off with crowd barriers and manned by a line of policemen.

The road repairs ironically coincided with Khodorkovsky's supporters being granted permission to demonstrate -- the first day they were allowed to do so since last Monday, when police arrested 28 Khodorkovsky supporters.

"On Friday, I received permission to hold a picket from noon until 3 p.m. with up to 100 people," said Yelena Batenkova, one of the organizers from the Committee for Anti-Military Actions, a group that opposes the war in Chechnya.

"Later that day, the local administration called and said that from Monday there would be road repairs exactly where we had applied to stand," she said. "We will contest this."

Khodorkovsky's supporters held portraits of him and a few signs that read, "Why is Putin only wasting Yukos? Think about it!"

Protesters were holding green and yellow balloons and wearing ribbons in the same Yukos corporate colors. The balloons were later released into the air, in what the protesters said was a symbol of freedom.

A policeman at the scene, Colonel Valery Buyekevich, told Batenkova to ensure her group dispersed by 3:00 p.m. to avoid possible clashes.

The police refused to allow reporters through the barrier to talk to the repairmen.

"Why do you ask me this question? You know why," Buyekevich said, when asked to give a reason. "Ask them when they leave to buy pies."

Opposite the courthouse, more than a dozen workers in bright red overalls were sitting in the shade, taking a break from drilling the pavement.

When asked by a reporter why they were there, a few walked away immediately and one said the work had started Sunday and would go on until at least the end of the week. He said he was unaware of what was going on inside the building across the street.

"As the saying goes, we have two problems in Russia: roads and fools. Well, the fools seem to be sorting out the road, but who will sort them out?" said Ergil Osin, 25, a systems operator who along with his friends was holding red flags that read "Idushchiye Bez Putina," or Moving Without Putin -- the name of the youth movement set up earlier this year in response to pro-Kremlin organization Idushchiye Vmeste, or Moving Together.

An employee reached by telephone at the road repair company AsfaltTsentrStroi on Monday said the company had begun work on May 14 under a contract from the city government. The woman described the job as "a large one," saying she expected it to be completed by Aug. 10.

She was obviously exasperated after receiving calls from several reporters.

"I don't know what all the ruckus is," she said. "We have a job to do."

When asked to give her name, she said 20 journalists had already called her and promptly hung up.

"Each day there is something different," said Robert Amsterdam, a Canadian lawyer on the Khodorkovsky defense team. "Today it happens to be the roads. God only knows what they'll do to us tomorrow: a plague of locusts?"

Lawyers said the verdict was the longest they could remember.

Tamara Morshchakova, an adviser to the Constitutional Court and a former Constitutional Court judge, said that according to Russian court practice no time limits are placed on reading the verdict.

"By law, the judge reads the verdict for as long as the document takes, breaking only to take a rest," Morshchakova said by telephone Monday.

Morshchakova said that Khodorkovsky's verdict was the longest she had heard of, or at least one of the longest.

"They must have had an order," said Igor Mikheyev, one of Khodorkovsky's lawyers, referring to the speeding up of the verdict.


Staff Writers Oksana Yablokova and Carl Schreck contributed to this report.

(The Moscow Times, 5.24.2005)

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Marathon Yukos verdict to drag on

The judge in the fraud trial of ex-Yukos tycoon Mikhail Khodorkovsky has adjourned her verdict for the fifth straight day.
A final judgement in the 11-month trial will not now be delivered until Monday at the earliest.

During the week, the court has been hearing a recitation - part-summing up, part-judgement - of seven indictments of tax evasion and fraud.

Mr Khodorkovsky, once Russia's richest man, faces up to 10 years in prison.

His lawyers are unanimous in expecting a conviction.

There have been daily protests outside the court, and one of his lawyers has said the case is an "act of reprisal" for Mr Khodorkovsky's links with the liberal opposition.

Stacked odds

"I cannot agree with the arguments of the defence," Judge Irina Kolesnikova said as she read the summation of witness testimony on one of the charges on Wednesday.
It is an act of reprisal

Defence lawyer Yuri Schmidt


Yukos verdict grinds on

Another judge added that Mr Khodorkovsky had taken part in a "pre-planned deception" when he acquired shares in a research institute by promising investment that never materialised.

Mr Khodorkovsky has always proclaimed his innocence and has refused to ask the court for leniency.

"We are seeing here an incredible distortion of defence evidence," said Yuri Schmidt, a lawyer for Mr Khodorkovsky. "It has exceeded our worst expectations."

"This is not a sentence. It is an act of reprisal."

Tax demands

Mr Khodorkovsky has been in prison since October 2003 and is being charged along with business associate Platon Lebedev.

He has branded the charges trumped-up and said they were used to "plunder" Yukos.

His lawyers have argued that political pressures played a big part in Mr Khodorkovsky's arrest and trial.

Many analysts agree, saying that the trial is politically motivated and that Mr Khodorkovsky is being punished for his funding of opposition political parties.

Yukos, the company that Mr Khodorkovsky founded, has come under attack while Mr Khodorkovsky has been sitting in jail and was broken up after it could not pay $27.5bn (£15bn) in back taxes.

Observers have said that the company may struggle to survive, despite the assurances of Yukos lawyers that they will fight to regain control of the company.

Mr Khodorkovsky's team, who have vowed to appeal if their client is found guilty, are also settling in for a long fight.

"My feeling is that [the verdict] will take days and days," said defence lawyer Robert Amsterdam.

(BBC NEWS, 5.20.2005)

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Meshchansky Court Establishes Price Cutting

The verdict


Yesterday for the first time, Moscow's Meshchansky District Court read the verdict against Mikhail Khodorkovsky and Platon Lebedev for an entire day, reading 150 pages as result. The court produced evidence of the defendants' guilt in misappropriating proceeds from the sale of OAO Apatit's products, causing damage to the company's shareholders, and failing to execute a court order to return 20 percent of Apatit's shares to the state. At the same time, according to Robert Amsterdam, Khodorkovsky's Canadian lawyer, there was no mention at all of the defence's arguments in the part of the verdict read out, as if the lawyers had not taken part in the proceedings.


It was hot yesterday in the court chamber where the reading of the verdict against Khodorkovsky and Lebedev has been going on for two weeks now. Presiding Judge Irina Kolesnikova even turned on the air conditioner, but it was not powerful enough for a 45-m room packed with people. The accused, who were sitting across from the air conditioner, didn't even feel a puff of air. However, they endured the stuffy room patiently, trying to keep themselves occupied in order to make the time pass more quickly and less tediously. Lebedev, who slept through the reading on the weekend, was back at his favorite crosswords yesterday. Khodorkovsky was trying to read a book, but he couldn't concentrate and started doodling in a notebook, occasionally glancing at the judge reading the verdict.

Meanwhile, contrary to the already established tradition, the reading of the operative part of the verdict did not end at 14:00, but continued to the end of the working day (until 18:00 in the court), and the pace of reading was noticeably faster. The participants in the proceedings took a one-hour lunch break. The change of routine pleased both the accused and the lawyers. Defence lawyer Genrikh Padva told journalists during a break that “if the court continues at today's rate, we will finally hear the concluding part of the verdict by the end of this week or the beginning of next week.”

The judges, reading in turn, first finished an analysis of the evidence in the episode of failure to execute a court order to return 44 percent of the shares of the Research Institute of Fertilizers and Insectofungicides to the state [Kommersant reported on this part of the verdict on May 19, 20, and 21]. After that, the three judges went on to the episode of misappropriation of proceeds from the sale of OAO Apatit's products. The court established that Khodorkovsky and Lebedev, “after receiving the right to strategic and operative management of OAO Apatit in 1995, transferred its products in the guise of a sale contract to dealers – Russian and foreign companies – controlled by them.” Apatite concentrate was sold to the dealers at an understated price (this nonlegal term migrated from the findings of the Prosecutor General's Office to the verdict), whereas the actual selling price was more than $23 per metric ton. Khodorkovsky and Lebedev, as well as members of the organized group they formed, turned the resulting difference to their own advantage. Lebedev misappropriated $32.5 million, including $2.8 million together with Khodorkovsky.”

The court mentioned in particular that proof of the defendants' guilt in this episode was obtained in observance of the Code of Criminal Procedure, but the fact that the crime was committed as a member of an organized group was an aggravating circumstance. In the judges' opinion, Khodorkovsky was the organizer of the crime and Lebedev fulfilled the duties of chief treasurer in the organized group – he was in charge of the disposition of proceeds and controlled the cash receipts to accounts in Swiss banks. Lebedev subsequently, with Khodorkovsky's consent, transferred this bonus to himself and members of the organized group in the guise of payments for rendering consulting services through foreign companies. In the court's opinion, the defendants' nonrecognition of their guilt in this episode was evidence of their attempts to avoid punishment for the committed crime.

Judge Kolesnikova then proceeded to state the evidence for the next charge – damage caused by the accused to Apatit's shareholders. Again there was mention of the understated price for which apatite concentrate was allegedly sold to the dealers, who then resold it at market prices. As a result of this resale, in the court's estimation, Apatit's net profit for 2000-2003 was reduced by more than 6 billion rubles, which caused damage to the company's shareholders, including the state.

The third episode in the case analyzed by the court was also connected with Apatit. The accused were proven guilty, as was Andrey Krainov (a former employee of MFO MENATEP), who is being tried in the same case, of failure to execute a court order to return 20 percent of Apatit's shares to the state. It is notable that perhaps the main evidence of Khodorkovsky and Lebedev's guilt was Krainov's testimony in court that he was not insistent enough and believed Bank MENATEP's managers, who promised to implement Apatit's investment program (this obligation was assumed by Krainov's company Volna, for which said bank was the guarantor).

After the end of yesterday's session, Amsterdam came out to the press to express his frank astonishment at the text of the verdict. “The court not only did not analyze, but did not even mention, a single fact or argument cited by the defence during the trial. The reading of the verdict gave the impression that the defence had not taken part in the proceedings at all.” The reading will continue today starting at 11:00, and Kommersant will be following it.

by Ekaterina Zapodinskaia

(Kommersant, 5.24.2005)

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Khodorkovsky Might Get Lesser Time

In the fourth day of the sentence reading of the former head of YUKOS, Mikhail Khodorkovsky, and former head of MENATEP, Platon Lebedev, the court changed the lowest possible jail term for both defendants from five to four years.

The familiar scene on Kalanchevskaya Street featured the tight police cordon on both sides of the street, gloomy faces of multiple special police and military units and a double row of metal tourniquets. The police were supposed to hold the waves of journalists and people wearing red T-shirts emblazoned with Freedom to MBK (freedom to Mikhail Borisovich Khodorkovsky) and pins "Khodorkovsky, go home!" from going into the court building. The soldiers were wearing bullet-proof vests. The police with the Rottweilers and German Shepherds were patrolling inside the tourniquets. On the other side of the court there were groups of people from Mosfilm movie studio which were holding professionally made posters "Khodorkovsky, pay taxes and take a rest in jail."
In the mean time, there were fewer attorneys and relatives of the defendants inside of the court building on the fourth day of the sentence reading. The famous defense lawyers Genrikh Padva and Yuri Shmidt did not showed up and said that they were not feeling well. And Lebedev's, attorney Elena Liptser, had to take their places. She said that the court was working for half hour longer than in previous days. However, the sentencing did get stuck on the charge of large-scale fraud of 44 percent of the Scientific Research Institute of Fertilizers and Insecto-Fungicides (SRIFI). "The sentencing papers pile on the judges table that were already read had height of three centimeters and the pile that wasn't even touched yet --about 15 centimeters," Liptser described to Kommersant.

Yesterday the court was naming the documents that were consideed as an evidence of the defendants’ non-compliance to the court order to return 44 percent of the SRIFI stock back to the state. In the mean time, one of the Khodorkovsky attorneys, Igor Mikheev, told Kommersant that there was no court order to return the stocks to the state. On November 24, 1997, the arbitrage court of Moscow decided to break the sale agreement for 44 percent of SRIFI shares between the Russian Fund of Federal Property (RFFP) and Wallton Company, whose guarantor was MENATEP. The demand to return the stocks to state possession did not exist in the RFFP court request, and because of that the arbitrage court had no right to order to Wallton to return the shares back to state. The question of RFFP paying money to Wallton for the stocks and the company returns the shares to the Fund could be the resolved by court if the RFFP would make such request. However, the Fund never made such request. It was not a coincidence that Salavat Karimov, investigator of the Prosecutor General office, wrote in the charges to Khodorkovsky, which the oligarch was trying "not to allow future loss of the shares in the court."

Yesterday the court changed the charges for defendants who trying to obtain the possession of the SRIFI stock from Article 159 of Criminal Code (CC) to Article 147 of CC, that was active before 1996. Both articles describe the punishment for large group fraud. Article 159 provides prison sentence from five years to ten years maximum; Article 149 says from four to ten years. Thus, the lower prison sentence limit was dropped one notch. However, it will not make a big difference because the total prison sentence is based on the partial addition of all articles of CC incriminated to the defendant.

After yesterday’s court session, attorneys gave journalists the first comment from Lebedev: "The witnesses’ testimonies are distorted. The sentencing contained witnesses’ testimonies that they never gave in court." The Canadian lawyer of Khodorkovsky, Robert Amsterdam, who was present during the sentence reading, added: "The court didn't take into consideration the testimonies of the defendants. It was only accepting the facts from the prosecution." Elena, first wife of Khodorkovsky and mother of his adult son, was trying to show the court atmosphere: "The court read the sentence fast and unclear. I wish the judges would respect just a little bit the audience. It's all complete delirium. Unfortunately it is not a dream but reality. All we have left is waiting the end of the sentencing." Kommersant will be monitoring the further sentencing.

by Ekaterina Zapodinskaya

(Kommersant, 5.20.2005)

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Monday, May 23, 2005

Russia's Courts Go on Trial

Yukos Case Bears Witness to Series Of Defects in Legal System

By GUY CHAZAN
Staff Reporter of THE WALL STREET JOURNALMOSCOW

In March, defense lawyers for billionaire Mikhail Khodorkovsky brought out a star witness they hoped would blow a hole in a key charge against the jailed tycoon.
Lyubov Myasnikova, an official from the Urals, told the court that one of the tax-dodging maneuvers Mr. Khodorkovsky is charged with using was perfectly legal. Thanks to the taxes paid by his company, OAO Yukos, her town was three times richer than the surrounding region, she said. Three weeks later, prosecutors said Ms. Myasnikova herself might face a criminal investigation.
Last month, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said Washington would be watching the verdict in the Yukos case to "see what [it] says about the rule of law in Russia ."Those who have been watching the trial since it started last June say the answer to that question already is clear. Asserting a series of due-process violations and a pattern of intimidation of witnesses, they say the trial has revealed serious defects in the Russian judicial system -- defects that recent overhauls have failed to fix.
In general, "there has been a retreat from the right to a fair trial," says Tamara Morshchakova, a retired judge from Russia's Constitutional Court.Last week the three judges in the Yukos trial began delivering their verdict for Mr. Khodorkovsky, the former chief executive of Yukos, and his business partner, Platon Lebedev. Although the two have yet to be formally pronounced guilty, the judges' summation so far is an almost word-for-word repetition of the indictment, suggesting the two men will be convicted on almost all counts.
The Kremlin has portrayed oil company Yukos as Russia's version of Enron Corp., the U.S. energy titan whose collapse in 2001 led to criminal and civil proceedings against its former executives.Many observers say the trial is less about corporate malfeasance than about settling scores with a Kremlin foe who supported opposition parties and hinted at political ambitions. "This was a show trial, pure and simple," says Milan Horacek, a member of the European Parliament who has monitored the Yukos case. "Just look at the way they kept Khodorkovsky in a metal cage, like a terrorist."
During his first term, Russian President Vladimir Putin pushed changes to improve the rights of the accused in Russia's courts, marking a break with the Soviet legacy of prosecutorial bias and near-zero acquittals. Defense lawyers grew in stature, and trials became truly adversarial.But despite some improvements, defendants still have fewer rights than in Western jurisdictions. Defendants still are often arrested and kept in pretrial detention in cases where house arrest or bail would be more appropriate, says Ms. Morshchakova, the retired Constitutional Court judge. Defense lawyers still are largely barred from collecting evidence during a criminal investigation, and judges routinely declare defense testimony inadmissible at trial. This month, the Constitutional Court ruled that prosecutors can appeal acquittals or sentences they deem too lenient. In the U.S., by comparison, only defendants can appeal a verdict in a criminal case.
The Yukos case has exemplified these problems. Messrs. Khodorkovsky and Lebedev were refused bail -- unusual in nonviolent white-collar crimes -- and have been kept in prison throughout their trial. All prosecution motions for the two men's detention to be extended were upheld. In March, the judge, Irina Kolesnikova, ordered the 41-year-old Mr. Khodorkovsky to be kept in jail until July 14 before the prosecution had even asked for an extension. She also didn't hear defense objections, although that is required by law.The Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe decided last year that the continued detention of the two men was one of the "most serious...shortcomings" of the Yukos prosecutions.
Other defense motions were turned down. Mr. Lebedev, 48, whose health rapidly deteriorated in jail, was denied an independent medical examination. Two key reports by the defense's expert witnesses were ruled inadmissible. Attempts to cross-examine the witnesses in court also were frustrated by prosecution objections, usually upheld by the judge."Unlike in Soviet times, our rights were formally respected," says Yuri Schmidt, one of Mr. Khodorkovsky's attorneys, who has been practicing law in Russia since 1961. "The judge listened carefully to all the defense motions. And then turned most of them down."
Ms. Myasnikova, the witness, is the 50-year-old deputy mayor of Lesnoi, a town of 56,000 people in the Urals. She told the court that Lesnoi had been saved from near-bankruptcy in the late 1990s when the Russian government allowed it to operate as an onshore tax haven. About 20 companies registered there to enjoy the tax breaks on offer, including four oil-trading companies affiliated with Yukos.
Prosecutors say Yukos wasn't eligible for the tax breaks because it didn't have any real operations in the region. Defense lawyers say they fulfilled the letter of the law that existed at the time. They say the companies were repeatedly checked by tax inspectors, who found no improper use of the tax breaks.
In 1999, the four companies paid their Lesnoi taxes in Yukos promissory notes -- common practice at a time when there was a shortage of cash rubles in the economy. The prosecution says that was a form of tax evasion. Ms. Myasnikova told the court it was "to the town's advantage" to be paid in IOUs, because of the interest that accrued. She said all the notes had been redeemed in full: In 1999, Lesnoi's budget received four billion rubles, or about $133 million at 1999 exchange rates, in Yukos notes, as well as millions of rubles in interest, or about 80% of its budget revenue for that year.
"There was no harm done to the town," she told the court. "On the contrary, [it] got an additional boost for its economic and social development." She said budgetary spending per capita was three times higher than on average in the region.Defense lawyers were jubilant, calling her their "strongest witness." State prosecutor Dmitry Shokhin began his cross-examination of Ms. Myasnikova by reminding her that Lesnoi's mayor was under investigation for accepting tax payments in promissory notes. Defense lawyers said the remark was an attempt to "intimidate" their witness.
Three weeks later, Mr. Shokhin asked the court to admit as evidence a letter from a senior federal investigator. It said he was considering filing criminal charges against Ms. Myasnikova herself, for illegally providing tax concessions to the Yukos trading firms."Some time ago we stopped calling witnesses, fearing they might face prosecution," said Konstantin Rivkin, one of Mr. Lebedev's lawyers. "We turned out to be right."

(The Wall Street Journal, 5.23.2005)

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Meshchansky Court Absorbed in the Verdict

The second week of reading of the verdict against Mikhail Khodorkovsky and Platon Lebedev will get underway today in Moscow's Meshchansky District Court. The court has already found them guilty of two counts of large-scale fraud in the acquisition of 44 percent of the shares of the Research Institute of Fertilizers and Insectofungicides and on the return from the budget of taxes (407 million rubles) paid previously with YUKOS bills. If the court continues to read the verdict at its previous rate of three and a half hours a day, the reading won't be finished this week either.


The three judges began reading the verdict against Khodorkovsky and Lebedev last Monday. The first two days were taken up with the so-called fundamental part of the verdict, which listed the crimes of which the accused were found guilty. Although the first episode in the Prosecutor General's conviction was embezzlement of 25 percent of OAO Apatit's shares, this charge was not included in the fundamental part of the verdict. Instead it began with the second episode – failing to execute a court order to return 20 percent of Apatit's shares to the state. Lawyers for the accused believe that in the first episode, the judges will issue an order to dismiss the criminal case on “nonrehabilitative circumstances” connected with the expiry of the ten-year statute of limitations for taking legal action against the accused. As it continued to read out the fundamental part of the verdict, the court also found Khodorkovsky and Lebedev guilty of misappropriating proceeds from the sale of OAO Apatit's products and of causing damage to the company's owners. Then, proceeding to the next episode, the judges stated that the accused were guilty of fraudulent acquisition of 44 percent of the shares of the Research Institute of Fertilizers and Insectofungicides, which owned two buildings on Leninsky Prospekt, and failing to execute court rulings on returning these shares to the state. However, as Igor Mikheev, one of Khodorkovsky's lawyers, explained to the Kommersant correspondent, no such court order existed; there was only a decision on annulling the contract of sale between the Russian Federal Property Fund and AOZT Wollton, whose guarantor was Bank MENATEP. The court also found YUKOS guilty of tax evasion amounting to more than 17 billion rubles from the sale of oil, and Khodorkovsky and Lebedev guilty of evading taxes as private individuals by receiving remuneration from offshore companies on the Isle of Man. The court also found Khodorkovsky guilty of embezzling 2.6 billion rubles belonging to YUKOS in favor of firms belonging to Vladimir Gusinsky. Going on to the reading of the operative part of the verdict, which the lawyers estimate consists of more than 500 pages, the court read out only the evidence for the episode connected with the fraudulent acquisition of the shares of the Research Institute of Fertilizers and Insectofungicides. The reason why it is taking so long to read out the operative part is that the court is engaged in reading for only 3 – 3.5 hours per day, and at 13:30 – 14:00 announces a recess until the following morning. Recall that during the trial, presiding judge Irina Kolesnikova often conducted sessions until 21:00 or 22:00. Now the court is in no hurry to go anywhere, which has led another of Khodorkovsky's lawyers, Yury Shmidt, to believe that, during the second half of the day, the judges finish writing the verdict or correct it. Vladimir Krasov, one of Lebedev's lawyers, believes that the court's is connected with the intention to finish reading the verdict simultaneously with preparation of the records of the proceedings. Then lawyers with access to the records will not have enough time left to prepare a reasoned appeal of the verdict.

Meanwhile, the police officers guarding the area around the Meshchansky Court give another reason for the lack of haste in reading the verdict. The fact is that everyone entering the court is subject to screening and a thorough search. If participants in the proceedings left for a lunch break, they would have to be screened and searched again on their return, and several agencies are involved in the process, including the FSB, special forces, Ministry of Justice bailiffs, OMON, and the patrol service of the Main Administration of Internal Affairs (GUVD). Screening and searching every participant twice a day would be difficult, and this is why the proceedings end at lunchtime. If the court continues to read the verdict at the previous rate this week, the reading will last longer than two weeks. Lawyers for the accused were already prepared to spend many days in court and are taking turns being present at the reading. They say the courtroom is very stuffy, but the judges refuse to open the windows in order to prevent passersby from listening to the sessions, and will not turn on the air conditioner especially installed during preparations for these proceedings. Lebedev's lawyers fear that his being in a stuffy room might make his already weak health even worse. Last Friday, Lebedev was no longer occupied with his favorite activity – doing crossword puzzles – but was dozing with his head resting against the iron bars. And for the first time, as he listened to the verdict, Khodorkovsky allowed himself a gesture he had not allowed during the trial – he stopped up his ears.

Kommersant will continue to follow the reading of the verdict.

by Ekaterina Zapodinskaia

(Kommersant, 5.23.2005)

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Friday, May 20, 2005

The Reading of the Verdict Drones On

By Lyuba Pronina
Staff Writer

"Khodorkovsky and Lebedev, knowing ahead of time about non-compliance with the investment agreement, ... organizing an illegal transfer ... illegal asset-stripping ... 44 percent ... ."

So went the monotonous drone of Chief Judge Irina Kolesnikova for a fourth day Thursday as she read out the verdict against Mikhail Khodorkovsky and his business partner Platon Lebedev.

Both men face up to 10 years in jail on charges of tax evasion, fraud and embezzlement in a case that many see as a Kremlin backlash against Khodorkovsky for his political and business ambitions.

On Thursday morning, the judges caused a minor stir by reducing on technical grounds one of the charges, theft by fraud. But the change meant only that the Menatep founders would face a potential sentence of four to 10 years rather than five to 10 years. The defense said the ruling was insignificant and would not affect the verdict.

The atmosphere in the court was hardly different from the previous three days, with Lebedev studying crossword puzzles and breaking into an occasional chuckle to comment on Kolesnikova's mumbled reading. Khodorkovsky just shook his head in response. At times he would pick up a book to read or a notebook to doodle in.

One defense lawyer, Anton Drel, said the judges had gotten through less than one-third of the verdict, meaning the reading could well continue through most of next week.

The stack of paper that remains to be read out is almost as thick as when the hearing began on Monday.

"I have worked in Africa, I have worked in Latin America. I'd rather do a case in Nigeria than here," fumed Robert Amsterdam, a Canadian lawyer on the defense team. "Even if there is corruption, there is political space. Here, there's no political space."

"I was in Chavez's Venezuela a few days after a coup, and -- to be frank with you -- there was less tension there than there is around this courthouse," Amsterdam said, pointing to the police standing behind barriers lining both sides of the street and a group of about 100 anti-Khodorkovsky demonstrators with ready-made signs.

Outside the Meshchansky District Court, Khodorkovsky's father, Boris, responded angrily to the protesters.

"Let those who write those signs go and look for the money! Yuganskneftegaz was taken away from Yukos -- well, maybe somebody got an ice cream for that," he said, referring to the state-held auctioning-off of Yukos' main production unit last December to settle part of a whopping $28 billion in back taxes demanded from the oil major.

"When he came to Yukos there had been no salaries for months," Boris Khodorkovsky said. "He gave people salaries, jobs to more than 200,000 people. It is all lies when they say he did not pay up. I asked him, 'Did you pay out the money, did you pay off the debts to everyone, or are you just one of those who fled abroad?' He said everything was fine."

Vladimir Ryzhkov, a liberal State Duma deputy, told reporters outside the courthouse that since the Kremlin's assault on Yukos began in 2003, the Russian economy had lost $100 billion.

"Listening to the verdict, it's like a chronicle of business in Russia, the usual business of the 1990s. And the most cynical thing in this situation is that those fat and corrupt bureaucrats basking in luxury are passing judgment on businesses that they profited from," he said.

"The state that established those laws and rules now wants to jail people who worked under those laws. ... This means that the country could go back to the days of the Soviet Union and claim that all property is illegal, all deals are illegal and all privatization is illegal. That is what this is all about."

(The Moscow Times, 05.20.2005)

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Lawyers Vanish at Noon

// Empty seats appear beside Mikhail Khodorkovsky in the Meshchansky Court


The Verdict


A scandal occurred on the third day of the Meshchansky Court's reading of the verdict against Mikhail Khodorkovsky and Platon Lebedev. Taking advantage of a 15-minute break, Khodorkovsky's lawyers, Genrikh Padva and Yury Shmidt, as well as Lebedev's lawyer, Vladimir Krasnov, left the court. Krasnov told journalists he had done this as a sign of protest, while Shmidt said he had never before encountered “such a shocking distortion of witnesses' testimonies by a court.”


The court continued reading the testimony of witnesses to the fraudulent acquisition from the state in 1995 of 44 percent of the shares of the Research Institute of Fertilizers and Insectofungicides, which owned two buildings on Leninsky Prospekt in Moscow. According to the verdict, in 1995, an organized group headed by Mikhail Khodorkovsky set up a front company, AOZT Wollton, which won a tender for the state shareholdings in the research institute. Wollton committed to investing $25 million in the institute (Bank MENATEP guaranteed the deal). However, the court found that they had deceived the head of the institute, Petr Klassen. They explained to him that, having received money in 1995, the institute would have to pay taxes of 35 percent on it the following year and therefore, it would be best to return the investments to Wollton immediately, and the company would pay them for the institute next year. This was done. As a result, the directors of the institute signed an act of execution of financing investment commitments, which was approved ”without due verification” by then Chairman of the Russian Federal Property Fund (RFFI) Vladimir Sokolov. However, in the fall of 1997, the new management of the RFFI discovered that the investment commitments to the institute had not been fulfilled and annulled the deal with AOZT Wollton. But Khodorkovsky and Lebedev's group had dispersed the state shareholdings in the institute among several front companies without executing the court order

In particular, the court produced as proof of the defendants' guilt the court testimony of Sergey Usachev, listed in the documents as Wollton's general manager. The witness stated that, between 1994 and 1999, he had worked for MFO MENATEP, the bank of the same name, and at Rosprom and YUKOS, but had never been Wollton's general manager, and that all signatures beside his name on documents were forged. This was also confirmed by an expert examination conducted by the Prosecutor General's Office during the preliminary investigation and now authorized as a basis for incrimination.

Khodorkovsky listened to the testimony without any special attention, turning towards the auditorium and smiling tenderly at his wife. Lebedev at first followed the arguments of the verdict; but when the judge quoted from the testimony, he burst out laughing, clearly meaning that the witness's words had been grossly distorted. A minute later, he was absorbed in solving a crossword puzzle, only winking at his student daughter from time to time.

After two hours of reading, the court took a 15-minute break, during which lawyers Genrikh Padva, Yury Shmidt, and Vladimir Krasnov left the courthouse. Seeing the defence lawyers' empty benches after the break, presiding judge Irina Kolesnikova glanced indignantly around the room and ordered the secretary to write down the names of the missing lawyers. However, the judge could not take any measures against them, since the lawyers were only obliged to get her permission to leave during the trial, not during reading of the verdict. In any case, the law allows only one lawyer for each accused to be present at the verdict.

Meanwhile, the lawyers who had left the court didn't hide the fact that they had not left the courtroom because they were busy but because they vehemently disagreed with the contents of the verdict. “It's incomprehensible why we were needed at all,” they said somberly among themselves. Shmidt, who went out to the press, admitted that this was the first time in his 40-year career as a lawyer that he had encountered such a “gross distortion of witnesses' testimonies to please the prosecution.” He didn't give any specific examples, but promised to do this after the entire verdict had been read. Krasnov, who came out right behind him, also said he had left the court as a sign of protest against the verdict's groundlessness. In Krasov's words, he was worried about Lebedev's health most of all. “The other day, we delivered some medicine that has to be kept refrigerated to him in prison, and we don't know where it is now. Platon Leonidovich isn't feeling very well today.”

Kommersant will continue to follow the reading of the verdict.

(Kommersant, 05.19.2005)

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How Long? Khodorkovsky Says "Infinity"

By Valeria Korchagina
Staff Writer

Midway through the second hour of the judges' monotonous reading of the verdict on Wednesday, Mikhail Khodorkovsky glanced up in the direction of his parents and stared.

In front of him -- unseen by anyone else in the packed courtroom -- was the question that has been on everyone's lips since the judges began reading the sheaves of papers containing their verdict on Monday.

Scribbled on a reporter's notepad were a single number and a question mark: "10?"

Khodorkovsky shrugged, thought for a second, then smiled ironically and surreptitiously drew the mathematical sign for infinity with his finger in the air.

Khodorkovsky's gesture of resignation, shortly after noon Wednesday, came as an indication that he sees no end to the state's persecution. He and his business partner Platon Lebedev face sentences of up to 10 years in jail on charges of fraud, embezzlement and tax evasion -- and the prospect of further charges after this sentence is handed down.

From his position in the defendants' cage in the cramped and stuffy Meshchansky District Court, Khodorkovsky, like anyone on trial in Russia, is allowed to talk only to his defense lawyers.

Sometimes, if the court guards standing next to the cage turn a deaf ear, defendants can exchange whispers with family members or friends as they pass by entering or leaving the courtroom. Most communication with family, friends and the press is carried out by means of nods, signals and glances.


But even the briefest of exchanges between Russia's former richest man and his relatives on Wednesday appeared to indicate that he has had enough.

"I am now plugging my ears," he told his mother, Marina, during a break in proceedings.

During some of the more mind-numbing stretches of the judges' rote-like reading of the verdict, the tedium was only relieved when the judges found difficulty in pronouncing foreign words, such as "foundation," "Guernsey" and "Lichtenstein."

"I thought that it couldn't get any more interesting than [during the case put by] the Prosecutor's General's Office, but it has," Khodorkovsky said, with a hint of an ironic smile playing on his lips, after chief judge Irina Kolesnikova adjourned the session early, for a third day running, until Thursday morning.

Throughout Wednesday's 3 1/2-hour reading of the verdict, which almost word-for-word continued to repeat the prosecutors' original charges, judges showed no sign that any of the defense lawyers' months of arguments or the defendants' denial of any wrongdoing had been taken into account by the court.

Both Khodorkovsky and Lebedev shook their heads from time to time in apparent disbelief and resignation.

The same mood of resignation also appeared to be taking its toll on the lawyers defending Khodorkovsky and Lebedev, who in private remarks admitted that they had a hard time fighting the urge to leave the courtroom on Wednesday, as all their work appeared to have gone in vain.

"It's all just busy work," a defense lawyer snapped, between quick puffs on a cigarette during a break.

"I have not heard anything that distorted the case evidence more than the analysis provided by the court -- at least since perestroika was announced [in 1985]," Khodorkovsky's lawyer Yury Shmidt told reporters Wednesday.

"This is not a trial. It's a real settling of scores," Shmidt said.

Khodorkovsky's father, Boris, also indicated Wednesday that his hopes for a relatively light sentence or some kind of happier ending had faded.

"This is a show," he said. "I don't expect anything good to come out of it."

According to Khodorkovsky's chief defense lawyer, Genrikh Padva, the reading will likely take at least a few days. By the end of the three judges' third day of reading the verdict's hundreds of pages, they had only just started the second of the requisite four stages.

By law, in the first part of the verdict judges announce whether they have established the defendants' guilt on each count. Part two is the analysis of proof, while the third part establishes the degree of guilt. In the final stage, the court pronounces sentence.

In another sign that the reading of the verdict would take at least a few more days, the remaining pile of pages of the verdict yet to be read still towered a good few centimeters above the pages already read.

The judges' reading of the verdict is scheduled to resume at 10:30 a.m. Thursday.

(The Moscow Times, 05.19.2005)

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Khodorkovsky Won't Be Diminished by Jail

By Boris Nadezhdin

The reading of the verdict in the trial of former Yukos CEO Mikhail Khodorkovsky is dragging on with no end in sight. The court will likely declare him guilty.

Yet in all fairness Khodorkovsky should be acquitted. This would be the only way for the Russian courts to save face. A guilty verdict will deal a major blow to the reputation of the Russian authorities. It will further damage the image of Russia's judicial system. Already, the case has seriously influenced the country's political and business elite. They now have far fewer illusions about President Vladimir Putin.

If we examine the legal basis for the charges against Khodorkovsky and his colleagues, we see that the accusations of tax evasion were based on official tax declarations that Khodorkovsky's companies submitted to the authorities over the course of many years. Moreover, during this entire period -- until, of course, the case was opened against Khodorkovsky -- these declarations were acknowledged as correct and legal. If there is someone who should be blamed for any violations or irregularities, it is the tax authorities.

In any case, hundreds of thousands of businesspeople used tax optimization schemes similar to those Khodorkovsky employed, such as moving to an "individual entrepreneur" basis. For this reason, there can be no doubt that Khodorkovsky has been singled out and that the law is being applied selectively.


Indeed, the case against Khodorkovsky is purely political. It is being used to teach businesspeople a lesson. This is, after all, the trial of Russia's wealthiest entrepreneurs. This is the trial of one of the few businessmen who was not afraid to demonstrate his political stance openly. He publicly announced his support of opposition parties, including the Union of Right Forces, or SPS, and Yabloko. Finally, the trial is a campaign against the country's biggest oil company, a financially transparent corporation that stood out from the crowd. By doing this, the authorities are trying to scare other businesspeople and neutralize a potential political opponent.

Yet whether he wants to or not, Russia's biggest businessman will continue to play a role in Russian politics. Khodorkovsky will remain a major symbol for the opposition even if behind bars.

At the same time, his political future will be his own personal choice. I hope that a long prison sentence, if it comes, will not break his spirit and that he will keep his desire to engage in public activism. If he does, he could become one of the main leaders of Russia's political opposition.


Boris Nadezhdin, secretary of the SPS presidium, contributed this comment to The Moscow Times.

(The Moscow Times, 5.19.2005)

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Thursday, May 19, 2005

The Tycoon and the President

What Mikhail Khodorkovsky's downfall says about Russia's recent past, and its future

MISHA, as Marina Khodorkovsky refers to her son Mikhail, was always, she says, a fiercely determined little boy, whether he was learning to swim or looking for a holiday job. His childhood nickname was “Toy soldier”.

Her son's ruthless determination brought him a stunning career, one that exemplifies Russia's post-Soviet history: the opportunities, corruption and chaos of the Boris Yeltsin years; the disappointments and revanchism of Vladimir Putin's presidency; and the uncertainty of the future. Mikhail Khodorkovsky made more money more quickly than almost anyone in history. Then—somehow—he incurred Mr Putin's wrath. This week saw the culmination of his trial in a Moscow court for fraud, tax evasion, embezzlement and running a criminal organisation.

The parliamentary assembly of the Council of Europe published a report on the Yukos case. During his annual address to the Federal Assembly, Mr Putin instructed tax authorities to stop “terrorising” business. See also Yukos, TNK-BP and Sibneft.

Russia's “oligarchs”—the small group of men who became ultra-rich in the years after communism collapsed—like to say that they are hated in their own country because, prejudiced by communist propaganda and Orthodox Christian asceticism, Russians do not yet understand the virtues of entrepreneurialism or the legitimacy of personal wealth. That is too kind an analysis of their unpopularity.

Like many who have prospered in post-Soviet Russia, though he came from a humble family Mr Khodorkovsky began with two advantages. He had a scientific background (and was thus less exposed than others to Soviet indoctrination); and, as an official in the communist youth league, he had powerful friends. As rules were bent and blind eyes turned in the Gorbachev era, legend has it that Mr Khodorkovsky found a way to convert hypothetical Soviet accounting units into cash, the cash into hard currency, and that into lucrative imports. He waded into the initial “voucher” privatisations of the early 1990s, which in theory were supposed to distribute the state's wealth fairly, and (in 1988) started a bank, which began to manage government money.

The bank also ran the rigged auction that led to Mr Khodorkovsky and his associates acquiring a majority stake in Yukos, which until recently was Russia's premier oil company. They got it in the gigantic scam known as “loans-for-shares”, in which great slabs of the Russian industrial base were sold to a small cabal of businessmen for a song. The motives for this crooked giveaway were mixed: an urge on the part of Mr Yeltsin's economic reformers to get state assets into private hands; the government's need for funds to see off the communist challenge in the 1996 elections; and sheer greed.

Loans-for-shares was perhaps not technically illegal; but as Andrei Illarionov, Mr Putin's maverick economic adviser, says, adapting Talleyrand, “worse than a crime, it was a mistake”. (He adds, though, that renationalisation of the ripped-off assets would be an even worse mistake.) The huge enrichment of a few insiders while most people struggled with poverty helps to explain why, for many Russians, democracy and the free market are still synonymous with corruption and inequality. If Mr Khodorkovsky and the other loans-for-shares participants helped to make a return to communism impossible, they are responsible also for the warped nature of Russian capitalism, and their country's disillusionment with reform.

Foreign investors with short memories are now bemoaning the demise of Russia's most “westernised” oligarch, which is what, when it suited him, Mr Khodorkovsky became. But that was only after he used every means at his disposal to take full control of Yukos. Especially after Russia's default-and-devaluation crash of 1998, some of the means were outrageous: squeezing out minority shareholders; moving important meetings at the last moment; hiding shares in offshore vehicles. There were rumours of worse.

Then, as his supporters now prefer to remember, Mr Khodorkovsky was the first of the Yeltsin-era tycoons to see that there was even more money to be made by going straight. Yukos started to keep western-style accounts and courted foreign partners. Oil prices rose; shares in Yukos, which was pumping 2% of global oil output, rocketed (see chart). Still in his 30s, Mr Khodorkovsky became, reputedly, the richest man in Russia. His career—from nothing to billions and then to prison—has the pure arc of a classical tragedy. This was its peak.

The over-reacher
Mr Putin's installation as president in 2000 was probably the real beginning of Mr Khodorkovsky's fall, though the new president was so opaque that his attitude to the uppity tycoons he inherited from his predecessor was not immediately clear. The downturn in Mr Khodorkovsky's fortunes became obvious in July 2003, when Platon Lebedev, his partner and now co-defendant, was arrested. Three months later, Mr Khodorkovsky himself was nabbed on a Siberian runway.

Almost immediately afterwards, Moscow discovered a new favourite parlour game: who's next? The game was hard to play, however, because nobody knew exactly what Mr Khodorkovsky had done wrong. The most popular theory was and is that he had violated a (possibly apocryphal) pact that Mr Putin struck with the oligarchs in 2000: they could keep what they had got in the 1990s if they paid their taxes and stayed out of politics. Mr Khodorkovsky and his associates funded several political parties, attempting what one Moscow banker describes as an “aggressive takeover of the Duma”, the lower house of Russia's parliament. There were whispers of a Khodorkovsky run for the presidency or other high office. In this analysis, a concerted effort to sway policy over energy taxes in June 2003 was the final straw.

But there are other plausible explanations. Given the oligarchs' unpopularity, it was politically expedient for Mr Putin to swing one from a lamp-post. As the very richest, swinging Mr Khodorkovsky would be especially symbolic. Or it may have been his plans to build a private oil pipeline to China that grated most. Or the Kremlin may have been alarmed by talk of a deal between Yukos and a big American oil company, after the planned (now cancelled) merger of Yukos with Sibneft, another oil firm controlled by Roman Abramovich, the owner of London's Chelsea Football Club. Mr Khodorkovsky also clashed publicly with Mr Putin over government corruption in February 2003.

Probably there was no single motive for destroying Mr Khodorkovsky. One that seems to have emerged along the way is the renationalisation of Yukos—and thus the strengthening of the government's control over the country's energy sector.

After Mr Khodorkovsky's arrest, many western fund-managers in Moscow told anyone who would listen that the problem was merely a private contretemps between the tycoon and the president, from which Yukos would emerge unscathed. They were wrong. A parallel campaign against the company soon began, in the form of vast claims and penalties for allegedly unpaid taxes, eventually amounting to around $28 billion; for one year, Yukos is said to owe more than it took in revenues. The basis for the claims was the purportedly illegal exploitation of regional tax-incentive schemes.

Mr Putin said repeatedly that there would be no renationalisation of privatised firms on his watch. But by freezing the company's bank accounts and setting impossible deadlines, the tax authorities and courts ensured that Yukos's tax bills were unpayable. Last December, in a transaction surreal even by Russian standards, Yuganskneftegaz, Yukos's main production arm, was forcibly sold in another rigged auction, to a front company registered at a provincial grocery shop.

The Russian government apparently came up with this ruse—“the swindle of the year”, as the loose-lipped Mr Illarionov called it—after Yukos tried to protect its assets by filing for bankruptcy in America. The origin of the $9.35 billion paid for the subsidiary is still a mystery, but the firm ended up in the hands of Rosneft, a state-owned oil firm. If Yukos's remaining assets go the same way (as looks likely), there will be nothing left of the company for the other shareholders who believed in Mr Khodorkovsky's transformation and bought in.

Rosneft's acquisition of Yuganskneftegaz, meanwhile, has derailed plans to merge the oil firm with Gazprom, the state-controlled gas giant (finally and farcically cancelled this week, though the government came up with another plan that would remove restrictions on foreign ownership of Gazprom shares, a move designed to alleviate some of the pain caused by the Yukos fiasco). The wrangling over the terms of the merger—and over which group of Kremlin henchmen ultimately gets control of Yugansk—vindicates those, including Mr Khodorkovsky, who maintain that the real explanation for the Yukos affair was always the simplest and most obvious one: graft.

The debacle of the auction confirmed the first big lesson of the long, meandering campaign against Mr Khodorkovsky and his company: that Mr Putin's regime is worryingly tactical, changing its methods and even its aims as obstacles that it ought to have anticipated present themselves. This amateurism has infected economic policy, over which the cabal of siloviki (roughly, “power people”) around Mr Putin, himself a former KGB officer, has come to exert a destructive influence.

The result has been queasiness among investors, falling stock prices and rising capital flight. Whatever the moral case for revisiting the privatisations—and it was a strong one—this was not the way to go about it. After Yukos, conciliatory government noises, such as Mr Putin's recent public instruction to the tax authorities to stop “terrorising” business, are automatically disregarded by Russian businessmen.

Will anyone be “next”? The Kremlin probably underestimated the economic impact of its grudge against the tycoons, and may now consider it has done enough pour encourager les autres. But, as capricious tax bills levied by freelancing officials have attested, the forces unleashed by the Yukos affair may be beyond Mr Putin's control. Whether oligarchs or smaller fry, businessmen sense that the old KGB adage—“Give us the man and we will find you the crime”—now characterises their dealings with the state.

The Trial
The charges in Mr Khodorkovsky's 11-month trial do not centre on the “loans-for-shares” rip-off that made him a multi-billionaire. They focus on the allegedly fraudulent part-privatisation in 1994 of Apatit, a fertiliser company, and of another firm, plus personal tax evasion, embezzlement of Apatit's profits through a transfer-pricing scheme, and his leading of an “organised criminal group”.

Mr Khodorkovsky's defence has been that he was not personally responsible for the alleged crimes, or that the actions involved were not in fact illegal. He and his partners say that they turned Apatit from a failing company into a going concern, and that the problems over its acquisition have already been addressed in a civil suit. (Yukos's defence against the tax claims is essentially that “everyone was doing it”; indeed Sibneft, Mr Abramovich's firm, exploited the tax loopholes even more efficiently than did Yukos.)

But most people who visited the stuffy little room in the Meshchansky district courthouse, where the trial was held, emerged with the sense that the precise charges were beside the point. It was a bizarre scene: the accused's families and a clutch of journalists crammed on to a few benches, while Mr Khodorkovsky listened from the defendants' cage and, beside him, Mr Lebedev scornfully filled out Japanese crosswords. The three judges who came up with the verdicts—only a minority of Russian trials as yet involve juries—did not always seem to be concentrating.

This air of predestination was not unusual: almost all Russian criminal trials result in guilty verdicts. A report prepared for the parliamentary assembly of the Council of Europe last year catalogued the improprieties in the Yukos cases: restrictions on the defendants' access to their lawyers; capricious denial of bail; harassment of witnesses; and the unnecessary secrecy of the trial of Alexei Pichugin, a former Yukos security official sentenced to 20 years for murder in a trial that ended in March.

This is the second important lesson of the Khodorkovsky saga: that in Russia, power still matters more than the law. Property is held at the discretion of the president-cum-tsar. Invisible rules and relationships and grievances matter more than rules that are written down. (It is said in Moscow that when the Yukos bankruptcy case was dismissed by a court in Texas, which happened soon after the Russian and American presidents met in Slovakia, Mr Putin took it as proof that things worked just the same way in America.)

Perhaps this was Mr Khodorkovsky's biggest mistake: to think that Russia had changed more than it has. “We lived our lives in the Soviet period,” says his mother, “and we warned him that you cannot trust power in our country.” But, says Mrs Khodorkovsky, her son told her that the country had changed forever. Another view is that Mr Khodorkovsky came to believe that he was invincible, and that his real failing was a classic tragic flaw: hubris.

It is the government's behaviour, as much as Mr Khodorkovsky's own, that has made him an unlikely icon of dissent for Russia's band of put-upon liberals. “His case is a symbol of the authoritarian state, of the unclear rules of the game, of autocracy,” says Vladimir Ryzhkov, an independent Duma deputy. Russians revere suffering, and many have relatives who once spent time in prison on spurious grounds. In Russia, says Igor Shaitanov, a literature professor, “to be unfairly treated is a big step towards becoming a hero.”

It helps that Mr Khodorkovsky led a relatively unflamboyant life, buying no yachts or football clubs, and preferring camping holidays to orgies in the south of France. It also helps that he and his associates spent some of their money on good causes: an orphanage, a university (Mr Shaitanov's), think-tanks, and so on.

Reuters


Putin may have unleashed forces he can't control

But the biggest contribution Mr Khodorkovsky has made to the transformation of his own image, in some quarters at least, from robber-baron to anti-authoritarian dissident, was simply that he stayed in Russia. Boris Berezovsky and Vladimir Gusinsky, two of the other original oligarchs who fell out with Mr Putin, gave up some of their assets and fled abroad, as have several of Mr Khodorkovsky's former associates. Mr Gusinsky left after a brief spell in prison persuaded him to cut a deal.

Mr Khodorkovsky, too, may have been supposed to crack and run. But, according to his mother, “To escape abroad means to admit one's guilt, and Misha does not accept any guilt.” Outside the court, as a few hundred supporters waved his portrait and yelled “Freedom”, Yevgeny Yasin, guru of Russia's liberal economists, said that by choosing to be a political prisoner rather than a political émigré, Mr Khodorkovsky had proved he was “a real man”. The Khodorkovsky fans were subsequently kept away from the court by riot police.

The last laugh?
Behind bars, Mr Khodorkovsky has also striven to re-engineer his reputation by issuing prison manifestos, which, like show trials, are a venerable Russian tradition. In the letters from his cell, Mr Khodorkovsky has criticised the inequities of the reforms that made him rich, assailed the liberal reformers for neglecting the plight of the common man, and abjured what he now calls “the tyranny of wealth”. In his last address to the Meshchansky court, he compared himself to the Decembrists, idealistic military officers who plotted unsuccessfully against the tsar in 1825.

The judges were still reading their verdicts as The Economist went to press, having repeatedly adjourned the hearing early. Though the final sentences had not yet been handed down, the judgment was said more or less to reiterate the prosecution's case (which called for ten-year jail terms). The two men will also face money-laundering charges, which will keep them in prison even if the sentences are light or suspended. Even a brief spell in a Russian jail, where tuberculosis is rife and “accidents” not uncommon, is perilous.

If he survives, what might Mr Khodorkovsky do? For all the mistakes and misfortunes of the last year—the Beslan calamity; the ill-conceived meddling in Ukraine; the botched introduction of social reforms—Mr Putin still enjoys strong public support, according to the polls, and he has nobbled the media to help him keep it. But his power-base in the elite, amounting to some siloviki and allies from his days in St Petersburg, is small. His enemies, meanwhile, are numerous. Mr Berezovsky and Mr Gusinsky, still rich men, have not given up hope of revenge. The other oligarchs have not generally spoken up for Mr Khodorkovsky, partly out of self-interest, partly because of old business grudges, partly because they worry that his obstinacy has jeopardised their own status. But none of them is fond of Mr Putin either.

He himself has denied rumours that he intends to change Russia's constitution and stand for a third presidential term in 2008. Many people are unpersuaded, and even he has not ruled out returning for another spell in the Kremlin in 2012, which the constitution would permit. By then, Mr Khodorkovsky—a ruthless man sunk by an even greater ruthlessness than his own—could be out of prison. The story of Putin and the oligarchs may not be over yet.

The Economist, 5.19.2005

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Meshchansky Fort

Protest


Supporters and opponents of Mikhail Khodorkovsky continued to stand in front of the Meshchansky Court building waiting for the sentencing in the YUKOS affair. Like the day before, the only authorized picket was a group of private individuals who had applied to the district prefecture to hold a picket with the slogans “Khodorkovsky must go to jail!” and “Khodor, your money smells of blood!” A small group of Khodorkovsky's supporters were able to stand only behind the 100-m cordon. Police arrested two picketers.


Yesterday morning, like the day before, reinforced ranks of police (patrol service, OMON, and traffic police) cordoned off Kalanchevskaia Street in a 100-m radius from the Meshchansky Court. Across from the building, people with placards urging the court to give Khodorkovsky the strictest possible punishment continued their picket. Organizers of the picket again received permission from the prefecture to stand with placards from 9.00 to 15.00, although neither the picketers nor the police could name these organizers. A police major on duty at the metal detector frame explained to the Kommersant correspondent that a group of private individuals, who were absent at the moment, had applied to hold the picket, but he didn't remember their names. Meanwhile, at the prefecture of the Central Administrative District, they showed Kommersant the permit to hold the picket with the signature of Deputy Prefect Sergey Vasyukov. A certain S.A. Michurin living on Proletarsky Prospekt was named in the document as the organizer of the picket; however, when the Kommersant correspondent called the home number given in the document, he was told that the Michurin family hadn't lived in that apartment for eight years.

This time, there were considerably more picketers than on previous days (about 300 people). Students and workers from the budget offices joined the pensioners who had picketed on Monday and Tuesday. When the Kommersant correspondent asked them how they were able to find the time to take part in the picket on a work day, they replied that they had managed to get leave from work or that it was a day off. “Why are you writing lies about us?” one of the picketers asked indignantly. “No one brought us here; we came to express our opinion – “Khodorkovsky is a thief and must go to jail!” There were also slogans like “Khodorkovsky, give back what you stole!”, “Khodorkovsky, your money smells of blood!” and others were written on good-quality placards made of banner cloth. When asked how much they cost, one of the picketers replied emotionally “How much do my hands cost? I made this placard with my own hands!”

An elderly man in a jean jacket and sunglasses holding a placard with “Putin, protect us from Khodorkovsky!” at first tried to convince the Kommersant correspondent that he had made his placard himself, but then under his breath admitted that “a young guy in a suit who looked like a businessman drove up in a car in the morning and distributed the placards to the picketers.” According to the picketer, the same young guy promised to pay each participant 300 rubles per day after the series of pickets ended.

Meanwhile, beyond the cordon at the building of RAO Russian Railways on the corner of Kalanchevskaia and Bolshaia Spasskaia streets, stood a small group (no more than ten people) of Khodorkovsky's supporters, whom the police had not allowed near the courthouse, despite the fact that, on their arrest [Kommersant reported on this yesterday] the day before, several of them were holding notices of appointment to the Meshchansky Court, which was supposed to consider the question of an administrative infringement, i.e., “violation of the rules for holding demonstrations”. Their picket was actually spontaneous. A group called Conscience (Sovest), which had organized a demonstration in support of Khodorkovsky and Lebedev, refused to hold pickets at the courthouse after a scuffle between picketers and OMON on Monday [Kommersant reported on this on May 17]. Gary Kasparov, the chairman of Committee 2008 and an active supporter of Khodorkovsky, had gone to Novosibirsk. Left without a leader, the Khodorkovsky supporters behaved peacefully, which didn't stop police from arresting two young men with the excuse that they were wearing T-shirts with the slogan “Free MBKh” [Khodorkovsky]. Since the arrested men already had subpoenas, the police took them into the courthouse, where they received new subpoenas for today. Once again they were charged with violating the rules for holding demonstrations.

by Oleg Kashin

(Kommersant 5.19.2005)

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In Three-Hour Doses

The YUKOS affair

On the second day of reading of the verdict against Mikhail Khodorkovsky and Platon Lebedev, the Meshchansky Court found them guilty of two more crimes – tax evasion by YUKOS and fraud on the return of overpaid taxes from the state budget. The court also found Khodorkovsky guilty of misappropriation of 2.6 billion rubles belonging to YUKOS in favor of companies owned by Vladimir Gusinsky. Yesterday, the court began reading the proof of guilt of the accused, a process that will continue for at least three days.

A police patrol stopped me on the road 400 m from the Meshchansky Court and asked “Where are you going, lady?” I said I was a journalist and I was going to court to hear the verdict. “Documents!” the sergeant demanded in a tone of voice that suggested walking along Kalanchevskaia Street at ten o'clock in the morning was a serious crime. The officer turned my passport and press card round and round in his hands for about three minutes and then said, “Don't put your documents away. They'll check you again after 30 m.”

I was dazzled by the people in police uniforms (near the courthouse, as reported later, were 500 patrol service officers) and special forces personnel in camouflage. Groups of several police officers were on duty with German shepherds and Rottweilers trained to detect explosives. “What's this, a special operation?” I asked the next patrol. “Can't you see?” one of the officers answered irritably.

A minute later, patrols once again checked my passport and looked through my briefcase, at the same time ordering me to take out everything metal and edible. I asked why they needed food, and the sergeant answered jokingly, “We're hungry.” Half an hour later, a colonel of the patrol service explained to me they were ordered to confiscate all food “so people won't throw it.”

However, once again, most journalists were not admitted to the courtroom to hear the verdict against Mikhail Khodorkovsky and Platon Lebedev, not even those who had submitted written applications for accreditation to the president of the court. A bailiff came over to the reporters and advised those who had filed applications to do it once again and send them to the court each day while the verdict was being read. I asked what was the point of wasting paper if even with an application, only a select few were admitted (yesterday, for example, they used a megaphone to invite journalists from TVC and Moskovia TV and the newspaper Rodnaia Rech into the courthouse, but didn't admit journalists from Vedomosti, the Washington Post, Gazeta.Ru, Radio Svoboda, and nearly all foreign journalists). The bailiff replied curtly, “If you don't want to send in an application every day, you'll stand at the fence.”

As on Monday, the reading of the verdict lasted only three hours, although everyone involved in the trial were prepared to spend the whole day in court. The same patrol service colonel explained the reason for this to me. “If they let everyone out of the courtroom for a lunch break, then afterwards we have to screen and recheck everyone coming back in. It's a nerve-wracking job – you saw how people were ready to run over each other to get in. So the police made a deal with the judges to work three hours a day without lunch.”

At 13.40, presiding judge Irina Kolesnikova announced a recess until the next morning. For three hours, the three judges, reading in turn, managed to finish the fundamental part of the verdict. Whereas on Monday, the court found Khodorkovsky and Lebedev guilty of six crimes, yesterday it found them guilty of another two. According to the verdict, the accused were behind the tax evasion by YUKOS in 1999-2000. YUKOS subsidiaries sold oil cheaply to four front companies registered in a domestic offshore in the city of Lesnoi in Sverdlov Region, and then they sold it for market prices; however, using the exemptions of the domestic offshore, they did not pay the full amount of tax. In addition, these companies paid part of the taxes with YUKOS bills, whereas according to the Tax Code, taxes are to be paid in cash. By the judges' calculations, the treasury was underpaid by 17.3 billion rubles.

The court also found Khodorkovsky and Lebedev guilty of large-scale tax fraud. The verdict recounts how the four front companies mentioned above roamed around the country to avoid tax audits, transforming themselves and getting registered first in one region and then in another. The legal entities set up as successors to these companies demanded cash compensation from the tax inspectorates for overpayment of taxes their predecessors had paid with YUKOS bills. In this way, they obtained 407.1 million rubles from the treasury, which investigators and then the court regarded as embezzlement.

In addition, the court charged Khodorkovsky with organizing bill transactions, by means of which 2.6 billion rubles were transferred from the accounts of YUKOS and two YUKOS affiliates to the accounts of companies controlled by the head of ZAO Media Most, Vladimir Gusinsky. The court agreed with the Prosecutor General's Office that Khodorkovsky engaged in “embezzlement, which caused damage to the owners of these funds.” That is, according to the verdict, as YUKOS's principal owner (at that time), Khodorkovsky caused damage to himself. There was no evaluation of the embezzlement of 20 percent of the shares of OAO Apatit in the fundamental part of the verdict. The court will probably issue a separate ruling on dismissing the criminal case due to expiry of the statute of limitations. At any rate, the accused should not expect an acquittal in this episode.

Proceeding to the so-called operative part, the court began to cite proof of guilt for each episode, as well as to rebut the proof of innocence presented by the defence. Yesterday, the judges read only the testimony of six witnesses to the fraudulent acquisition of shares of the Research Institute of Fertilizers and Insectofungicides. During this time, the accused were engaged in their usual pursuits. Lebedev was working on a crossword puzzle, and Khodorkovsky was reading some sort of history book, every now and then glancing affectionately at his mother and wife. They already seemed to be resigned to the fact that they would not be leaving prison soon, but not wanting to distress their relatives, were not allowing themselves to show emotion.

The lawyers for the accused looked depressed as they left the court. “It's already clear that the verdict is illegal,” said defence lawyer Yury Smidt.

Kommersant will continue to follow the reading of the verdict.

by Ekaterina Zapodinskaia

(From Kommersant, 5.18.2005)

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Kangaroo Court Costs

By Anders Aslund

President Vladimir Putin is quickly becoming a classic example of a politician who was very successful during his first term, when he tried to do all the good things people wanted in order to consolidate his power, but a disaster in his second term, when he had consolidated power and could do all the bad things he wanted to do.

One date marks the divide between the first benign Putin and the second harmful Putin. It is Oct. 25, 2003, the day of Mikhail Khodorkovsky's arrest. This event was never a matter of one person or his actual acts. The causes given for this arrest are many, but in the end they boil down to Putin's wanting to increase his political control and to his close associates' desiring to grab Yukos' assets.

Khodorkovsky's arrest signified the end of the oligarchs as a political force. After carrying out an intricate and elegant balancing act between oligarchs and KGB officers and being everything to everybody, Putin transformed himself from the president of the whole of Russia to the president of a small group of KGB men from St. Petersburg. He seems to have become their hostage because he has not demoted anybody from his closest circle. The remaining oligarchs were allowed to make money -- even more than before -- but they were ousted from politics.


This tiny group of siloviki from St. Petersburg sits on top of the state administration and the big state enterprises. Therefore, they have no interest in reforms, which in turn are thus precluded. They distrust everybody, so they have centralized decision-making to so few that both the quantity and quality of decision-making has lapsed to Soviet levels. As good KGB men, they do not believe in anything but their own disinformation, keeping themselves distant from reality. Such an unrepresentative and dysfunctional regime can hardly last for long.

Three of Russia's greatest recent reforms have been tax reform, judicial reform and the reinforcement of property rights. Through the Yukos case, Putin has effectively jeopardized all these achievements.

Whatever the final sentence will be in the Khodorkovsky affair -- if it is ever concluded -- Putin has rendered his judicial reform a joke, because it has been obvious that every turn of the Yukos story has been ordered by the Kremlin. Nobody can believe in the integrity of the Russian judicial system after this.

A patent post-Soviet problem has been Russia's arbitrary tax system. Putin did a great deal to improve it, but with the Yukos case, he has reversed the very essence of these reforms, namely the freedom from lawless persecution. The company appears to have utilized legal loopholes, and to an outsider no crime is apparent, but the government has the audacity to claim $28 billion -- and the immediate payment of that sum -- in order to effectively confiscate Yukos.

The worst long-term effect is that property rights in Russia have been severely undermined. If even the richest capitalist cannot assert his property rights, then who can? With the arrest of Khodorkovsky, Putin unleashed a property-rights populism that may be difficult to stop. As a result, the political risk premium for investment in Russia remains high.

It is difficult to imagine anything that Putin could have done that would have damaged himself more than the arrest of Khodorkovsky. But with characteristic stubbornness, Putin is just continuing to dig a deeper hole for himself. The question is how deep this hole needs to be before he disappears from Russia's political stage altogether.


Anders Aslund is director of the Russian and Eurasian Program at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. He contributed this comment to The Moscow Times.



______________




By Mikhail Delyagin


For the public and the politicians, the most important indicators of economic development are probably GDP growth, inflation and the standard of living. But for market players, another indicator is far more influential: total capitalization of the national stock market. As doubts increase regarding the reliability of official economic statistics, the very objectivity of market capitalization makes it even more important as an economic indicator. The dynamics of stock market capitalization are a significantly better indicator of economic development than the dynamics of stock prices because they figure in the appearance of new market players.

The appearance of a large number of new investors, which indicates the growth of the business culture and a push for greater economic openness, drives up market capitalization even when stock prices are flat. In 2001, for example, the RTS exchange index scarcely budged while capitalization more than doubled from 1.2 trillion rubles to 2.5 trillion rubles ($43 billion to $83 billion), or 17.2 percent to 27.6 percent of GDP, according to the Federal Service for Financial Markets. In 2002, the RTS index also recorded modest gains, but capitalization increased by nearly half to 3.6 trillion rubles ($115 billion) or 33.7 percent of GDP.

In 2003, despite all the concerns associated with the Yukos affair, extremely favorable conditions in foreign trade accelerated growth to 60 percent, as total market capitalization reached 5.8 trillion rubles ($197.2 billion), or 44 percent of GDP. Capitalization peaked on Jan. 20, 2004, when it reached $212 billion, or 45 percent of GDP, according to Oleg Vyugin, head of the Federal Service for Financial Markets. But the good times didn't last long.

Total capitalization continued to grow, but the rate of growth decreased dramatically. According to official data, by late 2004 market capitalization amounted to 6.9 trillion rubles ($247.5 billion), or just 41.5 percent of GDP. By early 2005 that figure had dropped to 40 percent of GDP, as can be discerned from the government's "Strategy for Developing Financial Markets," which calls for increasing capitalization from 40 percent of GDP to 50 percent of GDP.

Russia's foreign trade situation remains rosy, and the economy continues to grow. Thus there can be only one reason for such a dramatic reversal in the prevailing tendency of market capitalization: a gradual recognition among market players of the real significance of the Yukos affair. The shattered reputation of President Vladimir Putin's regime and the excesses of the siloviki oligarchy, which has replaced an admittedly wild-and-woolly form of capitalism with a system resembling a feudal police state, have radically altered how investors view the Russian market and its prospects.

The consequences of this change for market capitalization are easy to quantify. The foreign trade situation in 2004 was far more favorable than it was in 2003, as the average annual world price for oil jumped by 25 percent while the price of ferrous metals, non-ferrous metals and mineral fertilizer rose by 85 percent, 65 percent and 30 percent, respectively. Negative domestic factors were linked primarily to the Yukos affair. It therefore seems reasonable to assume that if Yukos hadn't been carved up, stock market capitalization would have continued to expand at least as rapidly as it did in 2003.

In that case, capitalization would have jumped by 60 percent last year to 9.3 trillion rubles, fully 35 percent higher than the 6.9 trillion rubles actually achieved. The difference between these results -- 2.4 trillion rubles ($87.4 billion) for 2004 -- provides a minimum estimate of the cost of the state's destruction of Yukos in terms of capitalization.

The Yukos affair has already robbed Russia of a third of its market capitalization, and the damage to the entire Russian economy increases daily.


Mikhail Delyagin, head of the Institute for Globalization Studies, contributed this comment to The Moscow Times.

(From The Moscow Times, 5.18.2005)

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Tuesday, May 17, 2005

The Fate of Mikhail Khodorkovsky

With tycoon's conviction all but certain, the focus is on the the sentence -- and how much sympathy it will generate


On May 16, the judge in the trial of imprisoned Russian tycoon Mikhail Khodorkovsky finally announced the long-awaited verdict. Well, she started to, anyway. Advertisement

In Russian jurisprudence, reading a verdict sometimes requires several days, as is the case with Khodorkovsky's trial. Until the end, we can't say whether Khodorkovsky has formally been found guilty -- or what the sentence will be. But no one's holding their breath over what the final verdict will be. The judge's opening day remarks strongly implied that the court considers Khodorkovsky guilty of at least some of the charges against him, and most probably all of them.

Well before Monday's court appearance, Khodorkovsky's lawyers said that they saw little hope that the court would show any clemency toward the accused. Once Russia's richest man, the former CEO and owner of the Yukos oil company has languished in jail since his arrest in October, 2003, after which he was charged with seven counts of fraud and tax evasion.

NO SHOCK. In Russia, the trial is widely seen as having been ordered by the Kremlin to neutralize Khodorkovsky's political activities. Before his arrest, the tycoon had been funding political parties without the Kremlin's blessing. He hinted that he might personally get into politics or seek political office.

So no one is at all surprised that, in her opening remarks, Judge Irina Kolesnikova spoke of the court having "established" his guilt with regard to two instances of alleged fraud, according to Russian media reports. In her statement, the judge said that Khodorkovsky and partner Platon Lebedev had defrauded the state during the 1995 privatizations of an insecticide research institute called NIUIF, and a fertilizer factory called Apatit.

Khodorkovsky is accused of using front companies to acquire assets cheaply in uncontested privatizations, and of using transfer pricing schemes to transfer profits out of the acquired companies, to the detriment of the tax authorities and other shareholders.

MARKET'S VERDICT. The tycoon and co-defendant Lebedev have consistently claimed their innocence. What's clear is that, innocent or not, the key charges against them could be made against many other Russian companies, including state-owned ones.

With a guilty verdict pretty much a foregone conclusion, the only real intrigue concerns the sentence. Khodorkovsky stands accused of crimes that carry a maximum of 10 years. Some have speculated, though, that President Vladimir Putin's Kremlin might settle for less.

Recently, Putin has been trying to reassure Russian business that he is concerned about the investment climate. If the court shows some leniency in sentencing Khodorkovsky, that might be taken as a symbol that Putin is interested in restoring a friendly dialogue with Russian big business. But a stiff sentence still seems most likely, particularly given Khodorkovsky's refusal to plead guilty. "The market has of course fully priced a guilty verdict and a long sentence," Chris Weafer, chief equity strategist at Russia's Alfa Bank, said in a research note.

GROWING SYMPATHIES. When Khodorkovsky was arrested in 2003, many investors and businessmen argued that the upstart oligarch had brought the Kremlin's wrath upon himself. Their mood soured only when it became clear that the Kremlin was also set on the destruction of Yukos as a company, including the expropriation of its minority shareholders.

Yukos was literally torn apart, its assets confiscated by the government, in order to justify astronomical back-tax claims with scant legal justification. Whatever the verdict of the Khodorkovsky case, it won't do anything now to resurrect Yukos or reimburse its investors.

Still, the Khodorkosky verdict will have symbolic significance. Not least because there's more sympathy now for Khodorkovsky among the Russian elite, and the expat community in Moscow, than there was when he was first arrested.

SWISS-CHEESE PROSECUTION? Khodorkovsky has impressed some Russians by refusing to buckle to the Kremlin's crude and clumsy intimidation. True, some cynics regard the oligarch's discovery of principles as a calculating PR exercise. But Khodorkovsky gives a good impression of believing what he says. His closing speech on Apr. 11, in which he accused his accusers in eloquent terms, won him a standing ovation.

For the most part, Russia's press has been highly critical of the Kremlin. In an article devoted to the forthcoming verdict, the May 16 edition of the leading Russian business daily, Vedomosti, detailed the many holes in the prosecution's case. "Similar accusations could be made at will against thousands of entrepreneurs," the newspaper said. Meanwhile, the Moscow Times, Russia's main English-language daily, had some surprisingly strong praise for Khodorkovsky. "Speaking in his own defense, he has put to shame the prosecutors," it said.

Khodorkovsky's appearances in court have also attracted small crowds of vocal supporters, who see him as a victim of political repression.

PLAYING THE ROLE. Such public displays of devotion aren't common in a country where support for President Putin is high and dislike of oligarchs strong. But even the Russian public is not as hostile to Khodorkovsky as is widely assumed. A February poll by the Levada Center, a Russian polling agency, found that only 29% of Russians believed that the court had conclusively confirmed Khodorkovsky's guilt (22% thought the case unproven, and 49% didn't know). Still, there's doesn't appear to be much interest. In a poll taken at the end of last year, just 7% of Russians mentioned the trial as an important event of 2004 -- less than those who mentioned the Russian national soccer team's defeat in Portugal.

Such public indifference isn't much consolation to Khodorkovsky. Then again, his career as a political dissident may be just beginning. Many suspect he is consciously playing the martyr in order to go into politics still one day.

Who knows what strategy the wily business baron will come up with? He may soon have plenty of time to figure one out -- behind bars.


Jason Bush is Moscow bureau chief for BusinessWeek

(From BusinessWeek, 5.17.2005)

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