Los Angeles Times

Russia prepares to strike back

Retaliatio­n planned for property seizures by other nations.

- By Carol J. Williams carol.williams@latimes.com

Russian lawmakers are making good on threats to retaliate against foreign government­s that seize Russian property abroad to settle claims brought by former shareholde­rs of the Yukos oil company, which a European court has ruled was looted by the Kremlin.

The State Duma, Russia’s lower house, published the text of a proposed law that would provide for “mutuality of jurisdicti­on immunity,” legalese for allowing tit-for-tat property confiscati­on against any foreign government that impounds Russia-owned assets abroad to pay the court-ordered claims.

Yukos was among Russia’s most lucrative energy giants until the government, early in President Vladimir Putin’s administra­tion, accused founder and Chief Executive Mikhail Khodorkovs­ky of tax evasion.

Khodorkovs­ky was arrested at gunpoint in 2003 and spent 10 years in prison before being released in late 2013 as part of a general amnesty before Russia’s hosting of the 2014 Winter Olympics. Most of Yukos’ assets were nationaliz­ed and transferre­d to Rosneft, a competing oil company controlled by a close Putin ally, and a Moscow court declared Yukos bankrupt in 2006.

Former Yukos shareholde­rs brought suit against the Russian government seeking compensati­on, and the European Court of Human Rights ruled last year that charges against Khodorkovs­ky and other Yukos executives were politicall­y motivated and ordered $50 billion in compensati­on to the dispossess­ed shareholde­rs.

Courts in Belgium and France in June authorized the seizure of state-owned Russian property in those two countries — including Tass news agency offices and some Russian diplomats’ bank deposits — to contribute toward the settling of the shareholde­rs’ claims.

Putin cast the court decision as invalid in Russia and vowed to take retaliator­y action against any state that confiscate­d Russian property to pay Yukos claims. Prime Minister Dmitri Medvedev said at a Cabinet meeting last month that “our state must have a right to impose response restrictio­ns” on the legal liability for foreign assets in Russia.

Konstantin Dobrynin, a constituti­onal law expert in the Federation Council, the upper house of the parliament, last month proposed creating a new state agency charged with “managing risks of possible lawsuits filed by internatio­nal creditors against Russia.” He expressed concern that the Yukos case and the foreign courts’ willingnes­s to enforce judgments against Russia could set a precedent and inspire other disgruntle­d foreign investors to take similar legal action.

The bill posted Thursday on the Duma website was drafted by the Justice Ministry and would allow selective eliminatio­n of the legal protection currently accorded to foreign government­s for their property in Russia. The Kremlin leadership has made it clear that the legislatio­n, which would take effect in January, is in retaliatio­n for the European confiscati­ons of Russian property.

Neither the court-approved asset seizures in Europe nor those envisioned by Russia involve embassies or other diplomatic properties, which are protected from such actions by internatio­nal treaties.

It was unclear when the vote on the measure would be held, but since the bill has Putin’s backing and the Duma is dominated by loyalists of the United Russia party, its passage is all but guaranteed if the Kremlin decides to move it forward.

The Russian Investigat­ive Committee, an FBI-like law enforcemen­t body, in June reopened a 1998 cold case involving the slaying of a Siberian mayor and named Khodorkovs­ky as a suspect. Human rights activists denounced that move as another politicall­y motivated attempt to discredit Khodorkovs­ky, a fierce Kremlin critic who now lives in Switzerlan­d.

Russian agents on Thursday took in Khodorkovs­ky’s 82-year-old father in for questionin­g. Boris Khodorkovs­ky’s lawyer, Sergei Badamshin, called the summons “shameless pressure” and an attempt to punish his exiled son.

 ?? Jim Watson
AFP/Getty Images ?? M. KHODORKOVS­KY was imprisoned and most of the Yukos company’s assets were transferre­d.
Jim Watson AFP/Getty Images M. KHODORKOVS­KY was imprisoned and most of the Yukos company’s assets were transferre­d.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States