The Phnom Penh Post

Russia charges econ minister

- Anna Malpas

RUSSIA authoritie­s charged Economy Minister Alexei Ulyukayev yesterday over suspicions he accepted a $2 million payoff during a deal involving state-controlled oil giant Rosneft.

Ulyukayev was the highestran­king official to be detained over suspected corruption since President Vladimir Putin took power in 2000.

The 60-year-old minister’s detention has sparked a wave of speculatio­n over whether the charges could be linked to an internal power struggle.

Russia’s Investigat­ive Committee said Ulyukayev had “illegally demanded” payment to give his go-ahead for Rosneft to acquire a majority stake from the state in Russian oil company Bashneft in a $5.2billion deal last month.

Investigat­ors accused Ulyukayev of “threatenin­g [and] using his ministeria­l powers to create obstacles to the compa- ny’s activities in the future”.

The committee had said earlier yesterday that the FSB security service, the successor to the KGB, detained Ulyukayev following an operation on Monday as he was receiving the bribe. Investigat­ors did not say who handed the alleged bribe to Ulyukayev.

The eventual sale of the 50.07 percent stake in Russia’s sixthlarge­st producer came after months of wrangling that has seen Rosneft – headed by Igor Sechin, a powerful Putin ally – face down opposition from some in the government.

Ulyukayev originally opposed the sale but later endorsed it after Putin said it could help fill state coffers.

The large-scale bribe-taking charge could see him face a jail term of up to 15 years.

Investigat­ors requested Ulyukayev be put under house arrest, an investigat­ive committee spokeswoma­n told RIA Novosti state news agency.

Investigat­ors have said that the acquisitio­n itself of the Bashneft shares was not the subject of the criminal investigat­ion.

Ulyukayev, who has served as head of the ministry of economic developmen­t since 2013, was tasked with pulling Russia out of a long economic crisis, sparked in late 2014 by falling oil prices and Western sanctions over Moscow’s actions in Ukraine.

RIA Novosti cited a law enforcemen­t source as saying that Ulyukayev was detained as part of a “sting operation” after investigat­ors received “serious evidence” from “tapping his conversati­ons and the conversati­ons of his associates”.

 ?? ALEXEI NIKOLSKY/AFP ?? Russia’s President Vladimir Putin (left) meets Economic Developmen­t Minister Alexei Ulyukayev in the Kremlin in Moscow on July 7, 2014.
ALEXEI NIKOLSKY/AFP Russia’s President Vladimir Putin (left) meets Economic Developmen­t Minister Alexei Ulyukayev in the Kremlin in Moscow on July 7, 2014.

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