The Daily Telegraph

Kremlin power struggle fear as minister is arrested

Politician accused of taking $2m bribe to secure sale of oil company to firm controlled by Putin ally

- By Roland Oliphant

A RUSSIAN minister has denied charges of corruption after his overnight arrest sent shockwaves through the Russian elite and sparked speculatio­n of a power struggle inside the Kremlin. Alexei Ulyukayev, the minister of economic developmen­t, was charged with soliciting a $2 million cash bribe to facilitate the controvers­ial sale of an oil company involving a key ally of Vladimir Putin last month.

Mr Ulyukayev denied his guilt and called his arrest a “provocatio­n” when he appeared in Moscow’s Basmanny district court yesterday.

“I am determined to cooperate with the investigat­ion as much as possible. I request more lenient measures of restraint,” the minister said at a hearing to determine whether he should be remanded in custody. The judge ordered Mr Ulyukayev to be placed under house arrest and wear an electronic tag after officials argued he was a flight risk.

Mr Putin fired Mr Ulyukayev as a minister in a decree published late last night.

Officers from the Investigat­ive Committee, the country’s top detective agency, and the Federal Security Service (FSB), the successor to the KGB, swooped on Mr Ulyukayev “in the act” of receiving the bribe money at 2:30am yesterday. Investigat­ors claim he attempted to extort the bribe from Rosneft, a state-owned oil company, in exchange for backing the company’s bid for the government’s stake in Bashneft, a regional oil producer.

Rosneft is controlled by Igor Sechin, a close ally of Vladimir Putin who is widely considered one of the most powerful individual­s in the country.

Mr Ulyukayev is the first serving minister to be arrested since Lavrenty Beria, Stalin’s feared secret police chief, was detained and shot in a power strug- gle following the dictator’s death in 1953. His arrest has sparked alarm that a similar power struggle may now be unfolding in Mr Putin’s Kremlin.

Mr Ulyukayev, who has served in the government since 2000 and held his current post since 2013, is considered a liberal figure who has opposed an increasing state presence in the economy.

He and a number of other figures associated with Dmitry Medvedev, the prime minister and a bitter rival of Mr Sechin, initially opposed Rosneft’s involvemen­t in the Bashneft tender, say- ing it was wrong for a state-owned company to take part in a privatisat­ion drive. The resulting political struggle saw the government suspend the privatisat­ion in August. Rosneft won the auction for 50.01 per cent of the company with a $5 billion bid when the tender was finally held last month.

A spokesman for Mr Putin said the Russian president had been aware of the case “from the start of the investigat­ive operations”. A spokesman for Mr Medvedev said the prime minister had also been kept abreast of events.

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