Install

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

Today's paper. Last Updated: 02/10/2012

Kremlin Media Adviser Lesin Sacked

Combined Reports

Lesin
Reuters

Lesin

President Dmitry Medvedev has dismissed influential Kremlin media adviser Mikhail Lesin for breaching government rules, the first such sacking during his presidency, local media reported Thursday.

The Kremlin announced the departure of Lesin — who founded Video International, the country’s main television advertising company, in 1990, and later held senior posts in news, television and the government — on Tuesday in a terse statement, saying Lesin left “at his own request.”

“At the present, I’m bound by certain obligations, according to which I cannot comment on the reasons for my resignation,” Lesin told Interfax on Wednesday evening. “And I don’t have the moral right to break those obligations.”

But Interfax, citing a Kremlin source, reported that Lesin was sacked for using “his position to resolve questions not related to his official duties.” He said Lesin, 51, had breached discipline and rules on state service.

Newspapers also ran stories Thursday that said Lesin, who looked after media, information technology and intellectual property issues in the Kremlin administration, was fired for conflicts of interest with his own businesses. Kommersant reported that he could have been a driving force in the National Media Group’s creation of NMG-TV, a holding containing St. Petersburg’s Channel 5 and Ren-TV.

A Kremlin spokesman refused to comment on the reports. Kommersant said such harsh comments have rarely been made by senior Kremlin officials without the president’s permission.

The reports described Lesin’s departure as a decision made at Medvedev’s initiative and said it was the first major Kremlin sacking of his presidency.

Medvedev has repeatedly promised to fight official corruption, but businesspeople and investors say the situation has not improved since he took office a year and a half ago.

The Kremlin administration is the most powerful body in Russia, and its advisers wield enormous influence. Medvedev inherited all the top Kremlin officials from Putin and has not made many changes in the lineup until now.

Lesin was media minister from 1999 and took his post in the Kremlin administration under then-President Vladimir Putin in April 2004, according to a bio on the Kremlin web site. 

(Reuters, MT)


Also in News

Pro-Putin March Plan For Feb. 23

Supporters of presidential candidate Vladimir Putin plan to hold a march Feb. 23 and expect that 200,000 people will come.

Troubles Pile Up for Embattled Youth Head

A senior Kommersant executive demanded Thursday that the Prosecutor General's Office open a criminal case against officials at the pro-Kremlin youth group Nashi, accusing the organization of being behind an Internet attack on the paper several years ago.

Blog Shows Lavish Chechen Spending

Prominent blogger and anti-corruption activist Alexei Navalny on Thursday accused the Chechen Interior Ministry of illegally spending millions of rubles in federal money on expensive cars and other goods.

City Hall Says No Approval Needed for “Big White Circle” Opposition Event

Opposition protesters announced plans to gather on the Garden Ring Road in central Moscow later this month, in the latest in a series of events calling for political change.

S. Ossetia Opposition Leader Hospitalized Following Police Raid

South Ossetian opposition leader Alla Dzhioyeva was hospitalized in a coma late Thursday after suffering an apparent stroke during a raid on her home a day before she planned to declare herself president of the breakaway Georgian region.

Nashi Denies Cyberattack on Kommersant, Threatens Lawsuit

Pro-Kremlin youth organization Nashi responded Friday to accusations by a Kommersant executive that Nashi was behind a cyberattack on the newspaper's website in 2008.




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

print


Comments

This article has no comments.

Be the first to leave a comment





Most Read