Justice for Sergei: are some people really untouchable? Not so.

“Deliberate neglect and torture.” An independent medical report implicates Moscow prison authorities in the death of a Russian lawyer who accused the police of corruption.

[vimeo http://www.vimeo.com/16758309 w=400&h=225]

Justice for Sergei – English tv-version from ICU Documentaries on Vimeo.

This is a huge story in the world, and it is definitely worth knowing about; watch this short documentary, and see and explication of the extensive corruption occurring today.  This is a breaking story, those responsible for what the physicians for human rights study determined as torture are coming closer to seeing punishment.

Please Mr. Medvedev, Mr. Putin; I beseech you to act swiftly to show that you will not tolerate this blatant corruption, abuse, torture, such vile acts.  Show that Russia is changed, that Russia can be a responsible global citizen, where other nations may not act towards justice.  Embarrasment is better than a rotten core.  Do not continue to pile cover-ups on top of injustice, become a leader, rather than a victim of intenational criminal actions.  Corruption hurts Russia, it hurts Russians, it will not remain contained in rural regions, without action rampant corruption can degrade your ability to move forward as a nation.

Sergei Magnitsky was a 37 year-old tax lawyer and auditor who worked for the Moscow legal and audit firm, Firestone Duncan. He was married and a father of two.

Sergei was born in Odessa, Ukraine in 1972, and emigrated with his family at the age of 9 to Southern Russia. As a child Sergei loved to read. On family vacations, while the rest of the family and friends would be splashing in the sea, Sergei would sit under a tree with a book. His studiousness was quickly recognized and at the age of 15, he won the Republican Physics and Mathematics Olympiad. When he was 18, he moved to Moscow and attended the prestigious Plekhanov Institute.

The “Russian Untouchables” page collecting videos on Mr. Magnitsky’s murder is a great source for clips on the topic.

To learn more about what happened to Sergei Magnitsky please read below

The death in prison of Sergei Magnitsky, a young Russian lawyer, remains one of the darkest scandals in the blotchy history of Russia‘s criminal justice system. One year on, this HD documentary brings the full details of his tragic story to light.

“Conditions were terrible. In one of the cells the toilet broke and flooded the room with sewage. A mentally ill person would sleep with the prisoners some nights.” These were the conditions in which Sergei lived out his last days in Butyrka Prison in Moscow. After making 450 official complaints about his treatment, and suffering the constant stabbing pains of Pancreatitis, his investigator ‘Silchenko’ tightens the screws – issuing a file stating that Sergei had already been medically treated. “There is a clear feeling he had been put in such conditions, which could bring him to death”, says the independent watchdog who investigated Sergei’s case.

“This is my country and I don’t want such things to happen here. Such lawlessness- I will fight it.” Sergei’s story begins with twenty plain-clothes government officials storming the offices of three Hermitage Fund companies and seizing hundreds of official documents. Investigating the incident, company lawyer Sergei discovered the largest tax fraud in Russian history; $230 million of tax refund – the exact amount the Hermitage Fund companies had paid in taxes the year before – had turned up in the bank accounts of the government officials. When the officials started threatening the company’s lawyers with criminal action, head of Hermitage, Bill Browder said: “‘This isn’t worth it. Get out of harm’s way'”.

Yet Sergei would not be silenced. He testified against the officials, and was immediately thrown into pre-trial detention, without bail, trial, or phone contact with his family. According to the wife of one of Sergei’s cell mates, prisoners were told to inflict “humiliation and beatings” upon Sergei to try to get him to withdraw his confession. And though we hear a confident and well-prepared Sergei in the recordings of his first hearing, his arguments were ignored.”You wanted to scream at the prosecutor who laughed and told jokes whilst [Sergei] spoke”, cries Sergei’s aunt.

“The pain was so intense I couldn’t lie down” Sergei writes in August 2009, “the guard promised to call a doctor, but no doctor arrived”. As Sergei’s health deteriorated rapidly, his investigator Silchenko offered him a deal: ‘testify against Hermitage and go free’. At his second trial, his mother and aunt noticed an extreme physical change in Sergei “he looked exhausted, but he still smiled”. It took only fifteen minutes for Judge Stashina to extend his detention. His heartbroken family left him chained to a radiator in a hallway. Four days later he died. “The death of Sergei showed that there was something severely wrong in Russia”, says his friend Vladimir, “we must acknowledge this, and do something to change it”.

After global outrage at the death of Sergei Magnitsky, Russian President Medvedev ordered an investigation. One year later not a single person has been indicted or charged. All of the Russian officials involved denied an interview.

Russian Untouchables. Episode 1: Artem Kuznetsov

Russian Untouchables. Episode 2: Pavel Karpov

Russian Untouchables. Episode 3. Olga Stepanova.

The Physicians for Human Rights have recently released a report that is the culmination of in depth examination of the facts in the Magnitsky case.

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To date, no one has been charged or prosecuted in Russia. Russian investigations have concluded that sudden heart failure caused Mr. Magnitsky’s death.

On April 15, 2011 U.S. Representative James McGovern (D-MA), helped introduce “The Justice for Sergei Magnitsky Act (H.R. 1575) to “make certain individuals ineligible for visas or admission to the United States and to revoke visas and other entry documents previously issued to such individuals, and to impose certain financial measures on such individuals, until the Russian Federation has thoroughly investigated the death of Sergei Leonidovich Magnitsky and brought the Russian criminal justice system into compliance with international legal standards, and for other purposes.”

Speaking from the floor of the House of Representatives, Rep. McGovern said, “In the absence of a formal and independent investigation into his death, the exact circumstances leading to his death remain shrouded under a veil of government secrecy.”

On July 13, 2011 President Obama met with Russian Foreign Minister Lavrov and discussed issues of democracy and human rights, including the tragedy surrounding the death of Russian lawyer Sergei Magnitsky.

In the fourth medical study of the case released in early July 2011, official Russian experts admitted that inadequate medical care had a cause and effect relationship on Mr. Magnitsky’s death. However, the investigation ignored significant findings about the continuously worsening and cruel conditions Mr. Magnitsky endured. During Mr. Magnitsky’s final hours, he did not receive any necessary medical attention.

A team of PHR forensic experts reviewed official documents made available through the victim’s mother. Our report Our report concludes that:

  • Mr. Magnitsky suffered prolonged severe pain, was denied regular contact with his family, denied medical evaluations for his complaints, fed meals irregularly, and kept under inhumane conditions.
  • The official Russian autopsy protocol (on which all subsequent Russian medical studies were based) was inconsistent with best international practice and deviated significantly from standard US protocols.
  • Tissues from injuries found on Magnitsky’s body after his death were not removed during the autopsy and their forensic analysis has not been carried out.

In June 2011, a lawyer for Mr. Magnitsky’s family filed a lawsuit demanding release of the tissue samples to the family for an independent study. A hearing is set for July 19, 2011. PHR has agreed to examine tissue samples from Mr. Magnitsky if the government releases them and Mr. Magnitsky’s mother provides them to the organization.

Download the Report (pdf)

PHR’s Forensic Experts:

Press Coverage:


-http://www.trust.org/trustlaw/news/breakingviews-us-gets-serious-on-russian-mega-corruption-case/

-http://russian-untouchables.com/eng/2011/06/empty-words/

-http://russian-untouchables.com/eng/2010/12/is-russia-a-mafia-state/

-http://www.economist.com/node/21013016

-http://www.youtube.com/user/RussianUntouchables#p/u

Who is Mr. Navalny?

By now, Russia’s reputation for corruption is a cliché, but it is impossible to overstate how it defines public life at every level, all the way to the Kremlin. Russia is one of the few countries in the world to slip steadily in Transparency International’s annual rankings. Out of a hundred and seventy-eight countries surveyed in 2010, Russia ranks a hundred and fifty-fourth, a spot it shares with Cambodia, Guinea-Bissau, and the Central African Republic. Corruption has reached such extremes that businesses involved in preparing the Black Sea resort of Sochi for the Winter Olympics of 2014 report having to pay kickbacks of more than fifty per cent. The Russian edition of Esquire recently calculated that one road in Sochi cost so much that it could just as well have been paved with, say, nine inches of foie gras or three and a half inches of Louis Vuitton handbags. In
October, President Dmitry Medvedev announced that a trillion rubles—thirty-three billion dollars—disappears annually on government contracts. This is three per cent of the country’s G.D.P.

Read more http://www.newyorker.com/reporting/2011/04/04/110404fa_fact_ioffe#ixzz1M9u0B3Ou

http://russian-untouchables.com/eng/

http://eurasia.foreignpolicy.com/posts/2011/04/26/the_limits_of_e_politics_why_alexey_navalny_won_t_win_a_real_election_anytime_soon

http://www.rumafia.com/person.php?id=166

http://www.newyorker.com/reporting/2011/04/04/110404fa_fact_ioffe

http://rospil.info/corruption-case/185

http://www.voanews.com/english/news/usa/Young-Lawyer-Leads-Fight-Against-Corruption-in-Russia-119251969.html

https://swilliamsjd.wordpress.com/tag/alexei-navalny/

http://www.thestar.com/business/article/789556–defending-the-minority-interest

http://www.youtube.com/view_play_list?p=0FD964BCF4EB1483

http://www.rumafia.com/news.php?id=207

http://visualrian.com/images/item/858354?print=true

Who is Mr. Navalny?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G7CZIk1PFdc&feature=related

Alexey Navalny– Трубоеды.mp4
http://vybetv.com/video_show/0baff2db243bc65245d8aa96543a57ba-947483

Press Center TV: The territory of Glasnost. Aleksey Navalny. Part 1
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NPJfUljpyEU

Young Lawyer Leads Fight Against Corruption in Russia
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IokxV91JATc

To Lure Foreign Investment, Russian President Calls for Reform

To Lure Foreign Investment, Russian President Calls for Reform

The president of Russia, Dmitri A. Medvedev, on Wednesday proposed a sweeping change to the management of the country’s many state-run companies, saying an overhaul that would remove ministers from the boards of directors is overdue.

After a decade of rolling back the results of its early post-Soviet privatizations, the Russian economy is again top-heavy with government-run companies, particularly in the oil and natural gas industries.

As president, Mr. Putin had appointed loyal officials in his government to crucial positions on the boards of large companies dealing in energy, transportation, military industry and aviation. Igor I. Sechin, a deputy prime minister overseeing the oil industry, is chairman of the state oil company Rosneft, for example.

Mr. Kudrin is on the board of Alrosa, Russia’s diamond mining company.

Mr. Medvedev, when he served as deputy prime minister before his election as president in 2008, had also served as chairman of Gazprom, the big natural gas company.

 

Sacked ambassador stokes Russian tension over Libya

Sacked ambassador stokes Russian tension over Libya

Russia’s former ambassador to Libya has stoked new tension between President Dmitry Medvedev and Vladimir Putin, the prime minister, after calling the Kremlin’s acquiescence to air strikes targeting Libya a “betrayal of Russia’s interests”.

Chamov, who was sacked as ambassador to Tripoli by Medvedev earlier this month, told reporters that Moscow’s failure to oppose the bombing raids would lose Russian companies huge sums of money in arms and other contracts.

Russia abstained last week during the UN security council vote which approved military intervention in Libya.

Chamov, who was reportedly greeted at Moscow’s Sheremetyevo airport by Russian nationalists bearing bunches of flowers, declined to comment on Medvedev personally.

Analysts said Putin’s comments reflected his desire to please patriotic voters, while Medvedev had acted shrewdly to preserve respect in the west while bolstering Russian interests.

Medvedev and Putin have both said they will agree together who contests the Russian presidency next March. Some observers think any disagreements between the two are cosmetic.

(Via The Guardian)

Investigators to Question Top Prosecutor’s Son in Gambling Case

Investigators to Question Top Prosecutor’s Son in Gambling Case

The Investigative Committee said Wednesday that it would question the son of Prosecutor General Yury Chaika in connection with an illegal gambling case, significantly raising the stakes in an ongoing turf war between investigators and the Prosecutor General’s Office.

A lawyer for the ring’s suspected mastermind, Ivan Nazarov, denied that his client had any ties to Artyom Chaika. The main suspect, Nazarov, is in custody, and investigators have accused several local prosecutors, including the Moscow region‘s chief prosecutor, Alexander Mokhov, of allowing the gambling ring to operate in exchange for free trips abroad and other gifts.

(Via Moscow Times)

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Chaika‘s Son Sought in Gambling Inquiry

31 March 2011

By Alexey Eremenko / The Moscow Times

… with an illegal gambling case, significantly raising the stakes in an ongoing turf war between investigators and the Prosecutor General’s Office. The Investigative Committee said Wednesday that it would question the son of Prosecutor General Yury Chaika in connection with an illegal gambling case, significantly raising the stakes in an ongoing turf war between investigators and the Prosecutor General’s Office. A spokesman for the Investigative Committee said Artyom Chaika would be questioned “soon”…

Chaika Plans Dismissals in Turf War

30 March 2011

The Moscow Times

Prosecutor General Yury Chaika plans to fire Moscow region prosecutors accused of having ties to illegal gambling business, Kommersant reported Tuesday. Prosecutor General Yury Chaika plans to fire Moscow region prosecutors accused of having ties to illegal…

Medvedev Toughens Stance on Graft

29 March 2011

By Nabi Abdullaev / The Moscow Times

… said the percentage of his orders being implemented is close to the highs seen under Josef Stalin and that Medvedev is far ahead of his tough-talking predecessor, Vladimir Putin, in his early years in power. Medvedev ordered Prosecutor General Yury Chaika to draft legislation to assist prosecutors in their checks of officials’ income declarations. “Prepare the legal amendments. I am ready to support them in order to make the checks more clear and effective,” Medvedev said in response to…

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Gambling Suspect Caught in Turf War Appeals to Kremlin

29 March 2011

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… week, saying it found no evidence that Nazarov financed prosecutors’ trips. It dismissed other related accusations as well, and closed several cases against its officials and a Nazarov aide. The Investigative Committee will ask Prosecutor General Yury Chaika to reopen these cases and related criminal inquiries into top prosecutors from Moscow region towns of Noginsk and Klin also linked to Nazarov, committee spokesman Vladimir Markin told Interfax on Saturday. Chaika‘s agency also closed eight criminal…

Energy efficiency becoming promising area for investment in Russia

Energy efficiency becoming promising area for investment in Russia

President Dmitry Medvedev has made energy efficiency a plank of his modernization platform. In 2008 he set a target to reduce Russia’s energy intensity by 40 percent by 2020.

And the Energy Efficiency Program to 2020, approved by the government last October, set aside 9.5 trillion rubles ($3 billion) for energy saving programs.

“In Russia we are totally focused on energy saving,” he told The Moscow Times.

Honeywell is only one of many foreign companies seeking a slice of the energy efficiency pie.

Currently, average efficiency for a gas turbine is about 35 to 38 percent, while average for a combined-cycle turbine is 55 to 56 percent. Alstrom’s range of turbines includes a simple-cycle turbine with 38.1 percent efficiency and a combined-cycle turbine with 58.3 percent. The McKinsey & Company report projected that Russia could save $486 billion over the next 20 years and reduce energy consumption by 23 percent if it plowed $210.8 billion of investment into maximizing efficiency.

(Via The Moscow Times)