Rusland waarschuwt EU om 'Magnitsky'-resolutie VS niet te volgen (en)

Met dank overgenomen van EUobserver (EUOBSERVER) i, gepubliceerd op vrijdag 6 juli 2012, 17:10.
Auteur: Andrew Rettman

BRUSSELS - Russia's EU ambassador has said ties would suffer if member states follow the US in putting sanctions on suspected Russian killers and fraudsters.

"It would poison relations, definitely," Vladimir Chizhov told EUobserver in an interview.

"Well, I am sure that reason will prevail in the European Union. I have more confidence in the EU than I have in the US Congress," he added.

The Congress' international committee in June approved the so-called Sergei Magnitsky Rule of Law Accountability Act.

If it becomes law, the US will impose visa bans and asset freezes on 60 Russian officials suspected of conspiracy to murder Sergei Magnitsky - an auditor who exposed a tax fraud mafia in the Kremlin and who was found beaten to death in prison in 2009.

Chizhov said he is "not threatening anybody."

But he noted that Russia might impose counter-sanctions on US officials if the Magnitsky bill gets through.

He added: "The Russian Duma could launch a piece of legislation called the Guantanamo act or the Abu Ghraib act," referring to US human rights violations in Cuba and Iraq.

The ambassador is right in saying that EU foreign ministries do not want to confront Moscow for the sake of Magnitsky. But the case is attracting more and more political attention.

German Green MPs last week joined MEPs and MPs from Italy, the Netherlands, Poland, Sweden and the UK in calling for sanctions.

EU Council head Herman Van Rompuy i, foreign affairs chief Catherine Ashton i and home affairs commissioner Cecilia Malmstrom i in April also urged Russian to hold a credible investigation.

Russia in the next few weeks is to say if a prison doctor is guilty of misdiagnosing Magnitsky's medical condition.

But for Bill Browder, a British venture capitalist who employed Magnitsky at the time of his death, the doctor is being scapegoated to get senior people off the hook.

Browder has published evidence showing that one Kremlin tax chief, Olga Stepanova - among many others - funnelled millions of euros of stolen money through Cypriot and Swiss bank accounts.

"Chizhov is a very articulate lobbyist for the rights of 60 Russian torturers and murders to travel and spend their ill gotten gains in Europe. It is remarkable that he shows no concern for the nearly $800 million that was stolen from the Russian government," he said.

Chizhov told EUobserver that a second probe by the Investigative Committee of the Russian Federation is looking at potential Kremlin tax fraud.

When asked when it will submit its findings, he said it is too "broad" and too "complicated" to say.

When asked if Stepanova is under any kind of investigation, he said he would check the names of the officials being questioned.

His office later told EUobserver this would be "impossible," however.


Tip. Klik hier om u te abonneren op de RSS-feed van EUobserver