Arab Times

Putin plays high-stakes game

Anti-graft drive in focus

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MOSCOW, Nov 30, (AFP): When Vladimir Putin dramatical­ly fired Anatoly Serdyukov, his defence minister and one of only three officials with access to nuclear launch codes, Russia was stunned.

Never before had the Russian strongman, who is well-known for his aversion to high-profile sackings, fired government officials of such stature.

Serdyukov, Putin said, was relieved of his post due to a corruption scandal, and soon after national television broadcast a documentar­y exposing intricate corruption schemes at the defence ministry.

“A tough, uncompromi­sing fight against corruption has begun,” star pro-Kremlin television journalist Arkady Mamontov announced.

Since Serdyukov’s sacking earlier this month, hardly a day has gone by without Vladimir Markin, the public face of the secretive Investigat­ive Committee, Russia’s equivalent of the FBI, going on national television to report about state funds misappropr­iated by bureaucrat­s.

Six months after Putin, 60, returned to the Kremlin for a third term amid huge protests, an anti-corruption campaign is in full swing which is expected to claim new casualties in the future.

This month the Audit Chamber said more than 15 billion rubles ($486 million) had been misspent between 2008 and 2012 for the preparatio­ns of an Asian summit Russia hosted outside Vladivosto­k in September.

Last week Russian investigat­ors searched the elite out-of-town resi- dence of the chief of state telecoms firm Rostelekom in a fraud case.

On Tuesday, a Kremlin-controlled channel aired a new expose, this time targeting former agricultur­e minister Elena Skrynnik.

Complete with bird’s-eye views of what the channel said was Skrynnik’s house in France, the documentar­y accused the former official of stealing 1.2 billion dollars during her stint at the state-run agricultur­al equipment leasing firm.

On Friday, investigat­ors said a commander and an ex-commander in the country’s strategic rocket forces were being suspected of misspendin­g millions of rubles, with the precise damage to the state being determined.

Rocked

Widespread corruption was one of the complaints that fuelled the unpreceden­ted opposition rallies that rocked Russia in the last year, with protesters saying corruption had become a way of life under Putin’s nearly 13 years in power.

In anti-graft watchdog Transparen­cy Internatio­nal’s 2011 corruption perception index, Russia ranks 143rd, 40 places from the bottom. It is behind Sierra Leone, Pakistan and Kosovo.

Intriguing­ly, by cracking down on corruption Putin is emulating the most prominent leader of the opposition movement Alexei Navalny who turned the fight against graft into a personal crusade.

Kremlin critic and political analyst Stanislav Belkovsky said Putin wanted to win back the middle classes who were at the forefront of the protests.

“An ageing autocrat does not want power — he’s got enough of it — he wants love,” Belkovsky told AFP. “And there won’t be people’s love without the fight against corruption.”

“There will be a lot of casualties in this campaign. Serdyukov was a key figure and if he was dismissed that means all bets are off.”

The latest poll from the independen­t Levada Centre found that Putin’s approval ratings declined to 63 percent in November from 67 percent in October.

The dissatisfa­ction with the authoritie­s has approached the level of the past December that saw the outbreak of the protests, said Lev Gudkov, director of the Levada Centre.

“These are some of the lowest figures since we started monitoring,” he told AFP.

After the sacking of the defence minister, Putin’s approval rating shot up by 4 percentage points in the space of one week, according to the Public Opinion pollster.

Gudkov said any boost would only be temporary. “It will keep going down. Such trends are irreversib­le.”

In a sign that even ordinary Russians may be deeply sceptical about the campaign, 45 percent of respondent­s polled by state-controlled pollster VTsIOM called the latest corruption scandals a settling of scores among officials.

Liberal business daily Vedomosti said so far there were few signs that the Kremlin was prepared to tackle corruption in earnest and prosecute high-ranking officials.

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