Russia's Investigative Committee says a former cabinet minister and ally of Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev has been detained for allegedly embezzling $62 million from a Siberian energy distribution company.
The committee said Mikhail Abyzov was taken into custody by Federal Security Service agents on March 26.
Committee spokeswoman Svetlana Petrenko said Abyzov was allegedly involved in a criminal group that embezzled 4 billion rubles, or about $62 million, from the Siberian Energy Company and Regional Electric Grid in Novosibirsk.
Investigators alleged that Abyzov and five accomplices stole the money and transferred the funds abroad.
Defense lawyer Aleksandr Asnis told the state-run TASS news agency that Abyzov would appear in a Moscow court March 27 for a pretrial hearing, and would plead not guilty.
Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said that President Vladimir Putin had been informed in advance about Abyzov.
Abyzov served as a cabinet minister between 2012 and 2018, and is considered a close associate of Medvedev, who was president between 2008 and 2012.
After Putin resumed the presidency in 2012, Medvedev returned to become prime minister. Abyzov retained his position in Medvedev's government until last year.
Investigators alleged that Abyzov founded the criminal enterprise in April 2011 -- a year before he was appointed as Minister for Open Government Affairs, whose duties included trying to make the Russian government transparent and accountable.
Abyzov also held several executive positions at major Russian energy firms since the mid-1990s, including a role on the board of directors at the electric power holding company EES.
In 2017, anticorruption activist Aleksei Navalny reported that Abyzov owns a mansion in Italy worth about $11.7 million.
Navalny reported that Abyzov amassed his wealth through his energy-sector connections in Novosibirsk.
Watchdog
Tuesday 26 March 2019
MOSCOW -- Russia's Federal Agency for Youth Affairs now has the power to block websites and online content it considers harmful to children, as part of the government's broad effort to build a comprehensive system for monitoring the Internet.
The agency, commonly known as Rosmolodyozh, was granted the authority during a parliamentary session held on March 21. It’s part of a package of changes to a 2012 law creating a blacklist of websites under the oversight of the communications watchdog Roskomnadzor.
A corresponding document posted to the government's legal portal on March 25 explained that Rosmolodyozh will be able to censor any online content "encouraging children to engage or otherwise involving them in illegal activity that represents a threat to their lives and/or health or the lives and/or health of others."
The move makes Rosmolodyozh the sixth state organ granted the right to enforce online censorship. Each of the six is tasked with monitoring content that falls within its official purview. The Interior Ministry, for instance, deals with content that promotes the use or possession of drugs; the Tax Ministry clamps down on illegal gambling sites.
Proposals to punish attempts at corrupting Russia's younger generation have been voiced by Russian officials for years.
In 2013, the country introduced legislation banning gay "propaganda," with the goal of shielding children "from information promoting the denial of traditional family values," but which rights groups have criticized as homophobic and discriminatory.
After a wave of anti-corruption protests in March 2017 saw the active involvement of teenagers, many of them motivated by the online campaign of opposition leader Aleksei Navalny, the Kremlin unveiled a series of measures aimed ostensibly at protecting children from corrupting online content, as well as a law banning any action that might encourage them to participate in unsanctioned protests.
On March 26, a Navalny supporter in Kaliningrad, Russia’s Baltic exclave, became the first person prosecuted under that law, which Putin signed last year. Ivan Luzin was fined 30,000 rubles ($470) for appearing alongside two teenagers in a demonstration against police torture last month.
In late December, culminating a year that had witnessed a spate of knife and gun attacks in Russian schools, President Vladimir Putin signed a law banning social-media pages from propagating violence and any other online content seen as promoting harmful acts.
It is this law that Rosmolodyozh has now been granted authority to enforce.
Critics say such measures are elements of an ambitious government campaign to bring the Russian Internet to heel at a time when the Kremlin is becoming increasingly aware of the web's power to incite protest and civil disobedience among a population disillusioned by the pace of economic reform and the scale of official corruption.
“We expect greater self-censorship in the Russian Internet, and it’s unlikely this measure will help the interests of children," Sarkis Darbinyan of Roskomsvoboda, an organization that monitors online censorship in Russia, said of the law.
In a recent statement, Roskomsvoboda cited studies showing social media had, at best, a minor role in fueling the violent incidents that took place in Russian schools.
“The blocking of web resources has no impact on reducing youth suicides or the use of drugs among children," Darbinyan said in a telephone interview. “This initiative deteriorates further the space for online free speech in Russia."
In January, the Education Ministry announced that it would allocate 628 million rubles ($9.7 million) over a three-year period in an effort to root out online content that poses harm to the lives or health of Russian children. It will be part of a top-down campaign to monitor such content that involves the operation of multiple “cyberteams" across the country, and thousands of volunteers.
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