Install

Get the latest updates as we post them — right on your browser

Today's paper. Last Updated: 05/27/2012

Book on Graft in Moscow Region Seized

Moscow regional police have seized the bulk of the print run of a book written by a Forbes Russia investigative reporter about the regions authorities' purported links to corruption.

The confiscation took place after Deputy Governor Igor Parkhomenko filed a libel complaint with the local police over the book, titled, "Corporation 'Moscow Region': How Russia's Richest Region Was Bankrupted."

Police seized some 3,500 copies of the book, written by Anna Sokolova, at a printing office located in the Moscow region on Thursday, said Leonid Bershidsky, editorial director at Eksmo, the book's publisher.

The other 1,500 copies of the book's print run of 5,000 were shipped to bookstores, Bershidsky said Friday on his Facebook page.

The confiscated books were not delivered to stores after an obscure company asked Eksmo to hold off on the shipments because it wanted to purchase them all, he said. The request came two days before the confiscation, but the company, Konsard, never picked the order.

Only several hours passed between Parkhomenko filing his libel complaint and police officers seizing the books, a turnaround time that is unusually fast, anti-corruption activist Alexei Navalny said on his blog. He said similar requests that he has filed usually take weeks to process.

Navalny said the few hours before the confiscation were simply not enough time for police experts to read the book to decide whether its contents were libelous.

No one was immediately available for comment at the Moscow regional police's office or the governor's. Neither agency has commented on the matter publicly.

The book was listed as "unavailable" by online retailer Ozon.ru over the weekend. Forbes has released a sample chapter on its web site.

"Corporation 'Moscow Region'" rehashes corruption allegations that have plagued the administration of Governor Boris Gromov in the years since he was elected in 2000. Among them are reports that officials stalled and harassed IKEA's local business in attempts to obtain kickbacks and accusations that companies linked to regional authorities purchased agriculture land for illegal real estate developments. The book also includes the story of Alexei Kuznetsov, the region's former top financial official who has been implicated in a 30 billion ruble ($1 billion) embezzlement scheme that brought the region to the brink of default in 2008. Kuznetsov moved to the United States in 2008, while his former deputy Valery Nosov was arrested last year and remains in pretrial detention pending trial on fraud charges.

No repercussions have followed for Gromov, one of the few veteran governors to remain in office after Kremlin-orchestrated shuffles over the past year. But media reports have speculated that he has fallen out of favor with the Kremlin and faces removal.

The book claims that Gromov, a veteran of the Afghan War, is aware of many wrongdoings outlined in its chapters because he appointed fellow war veterans to many posts in his administration.

Sokolova said the book is largely based on her coverage of Moscow regional affairs for Forbes. Many allegations in its chapters, however, have been reported by the media before.

"I knew that the Moscow region had many tricky problems, so I tried to write about them in plain language," Sokolova said by telephone Friday.

She said Moscow regional officials ignored all her requests for interviews so she wrote the book based on their public statements.

Eksmo stands behind Sokolova and her book, Bershidsky said.

But Sokolova said she felt nervous, noting that a handful of other journalists who have written about alleged corruption by regional authorities have been hospitalized after vicious — and unsolved — attacks.

"I have written about people who face police abuse, and I don't want to get into such a situation myself," she said.





This article has no comments.

Be the first to leave a comment


Discussion
The Moscow Times welcomes your comments and invites you to discuss topics with other readers. Your comment will be posted automatically to enable a live discussion. If you aren't familiar with our comments policy, you can read it here.

If you're a registered user, you can start typing your comment below. If not, take a moment to sign up. and then return to the article.

If your comment doesn't appear, contact us by using our web form.

Comments

Comments via Facebook



Also in News

Medvedev Takes the Reins of Leading Party

Delegates to the United Russia convention held this weekend unanimously voted Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev into the party's leading position, making the party's new member its chairman as well.

Russia's Grannies Take 2nd at Eurovision Final

The endearing Buranovskiye Babushki held their own against the best musical acts of 42 countries in Baku, finishing second to Sweden's Loreen at the Eurovision contest final in Azerbaijan's capital.

Khodorkovsky Lawyers Deny Report That Tycoon Asked for Olympic Visa Ban

Lawyers for imprisoned tycoon Mikhail Khodorkovsky denied a report circulating Sunday in the British media that their client sent a letter to the British prime minister urging a visa ban on 308 Russian officials at the London Summer Olympics.

Attempted Gay Parade Descends Into Violence, Arrests

An unsanctioned gay pride rally descended into violence Sunday as religious activists sought to break up the event and police detained protesters.

4 Russian Bikers Detained in Iraq

Four Russian bikers have been detained in Iraq, possibly on suspicion of spying, prompting a surge of concern at home.

Putin to Take First Foreign Trip to Belarus May 31

President Vladimir Putin will travel to Belarus on May 31 for his first foreign visit since taking office earlier this month, followed by a trip to Germany and France.



print


Comments

This article has no comments.

Be the first to leave a comment





Most Read
MarketGid