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Konstantin Sinitsyn
Konstantin Sinitsyn

Russian opposition activist Konstantin Sinitsyn has been found dead of head injuries in the entranceway to his St. Petersburg apartment building.

St. Petersburg Legislative Assembly lawmaker Boris Vishnevsky posted the news on February 2, although the incident apparently happened on January 26.

Vishnevsky said Sinitsyn died of trauma to the head and that police had detained one suspect. Authorities say they believe the motive was robbery.

Sinitsyn, 53, was a regular participant in pro-democracy and anticorruption demonstrations in St. Petersburg.

In 2015, he supported a wave of protests conducted by long-distance truckers against rising road tariffs. He also figured prominently in St. Petersburg protests against a government decision to hand the landmark St. Isaac's Cathedral over to the Russian Orthodox Church.

With reporting by Fontanka.ru

Russian oligarchs suspected of corruption will be forced to explain their wealth in Britain, The Times newspaper reported on February 3, quoting the security minister.

Officials are preparing to use new orders, which came into effect this week, enabling them to seize suspicious assets until those under investigation can properly account for their acquisitions, Security Minister Ben Wallace told The Times.

Wallace said the government would use powers to freeze and recover property if individuals cannot explain how they acquired assets over $70,000.

"When we get to you, we will come for you, for your assets, and we will make the environment that you live in difficult," Wallace said.

Officials estimate that around $127 billion (102 billion euros) of illegal funds are laundered through Britain every year.

Last year, British media reported on a "Laundromat" inquiry into an alleged Russian-led money-laundering scheme, in which $22.3 billion passed through Moldova using Russian shell companies and fictitious loans from offshore companies based in Britain in 2011-14.

Wallace said the British government was determined to stop such behavior.

"What we know from the Laundromat exposé is that certainly there have been links to the state," he said.

“The government's view is that we know what they are up to and we are not going to let it happen anymore,” he added.

Based on reporting by The Times, Reuters, and AFP

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"Watchdog" is a blog with a singular mission -- to monitor the latest developments concerning human rights, civil society, and press freedom. We'll pay particular attention to reports concerning countries in RFE/RL's broadcast region.

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