Putin
says he will pardon jailed oil tycoon Khodorkovsky shortly
Vladimir
Putin will sign a pardon for jailed ex-Yukos CEO Mikhail Khodorkovsky
“in the nearest time,” the Russian president announced following
a large media conference in Moscow.
RT,
19
December, 2013
“He
has spent over ten years in confinement – which is a serious term,
I believe,”
Putin told journalists on Thursday after a four-hour Q&A session
with national and foreign media.
In
the pardon plea that Khodorkovsky “has
written just recently,”
he referred to “humanitarian
circumstances,”
the president said. “His
mother is ill. And I think that a decision can be made and the decree
on the pardon will be signed in the nearest time.”
Under
Russian law, convicts are entitled to seek a pardon, Putin said.
However, Khodorkovsky did not do so until recently, when an appeal
was finally submitted, he said.
The
comment was made after the annual press-conference with over 1,300
journalists present. Just as the president was preparing to leave the
conference hall, one of reporters asked him about Khodorkovsky.
Earlier
in the press conference, Putin was asked about the possibility of a
third criminal case being brought against the former Yukos CEO. The
president said he did not want to comment as he had nothing to do
with it. He added, though, that he saw no feasibility in a third case
going forward.
Khodorkovsky's
mother, Marina, told RT that she last spoke with her son “through
a glass wall”
back in August, when she came to see him in jail.
“So,
we don’t know about his reaction [to the news],”
she said. “[Prisoners]
are allowed to make phone calls once a week, on Saturdays. So, I
can’t learn about his response before Saturday.”
She
said Putin’s decision came as a surprise to her.
“It
was a bolt from the blue for me, because I was totally unaware about
[the request for pardon],”
Khodorkovskaya said. “I
don’t know if he asked for a pardon. I know absolutely nothing
about that.”
Answering
RT’s question about whether Putin’s decision was partly linked to
the state of her health, Marina said: “I
would like to believe that he still has some humane feelings.”
Pardon plea takes Khodorkovsky's lawyer by surprise
Meanwhile,
Khodorkovsky’s lawyer Vadim Klyuvgant told the RAPSI news agency
that he “did
not apply [for a pardon] and we have no information that anyone has
applied on his behalf recently.”
He
added: “We
don’t have such information, even though pardon pleas have
regularly been submitted by various persons”
during all the years of Khodorkovsky’s confinement. Later in the
day, the legal team departed for an urgent meeting with their client.
Until the lawyers meet with @Khodorkovsky, all their previous statements regarding him asking for a pardon should be considered invalid.
— khodorkovsky (@khodorkovsky) December 19, 2013
Putin’s
press-secretary Dmitry Peskov, however, said the letter Putin has
recently received was signed by Mikhail Khodorkovsky personally. By
filing a request for a pardon, Khodorkovsky is admitting his guilt,
Peskov also said.
“A
petition for a pardon has been submitted to the president. If he asks
for a pardon, it means he admits his guilt,”
Putin’s press secretary declared.
Not
everyone viewed the move as such. Pavel Krasheninnikov, chairman of
State Duma's Legislation Committee, argues that admitting one’s
guilt is not a condition required by the law.
“The
Constitution provides for a right to file a request for a pardon.
There is no requirement for admitting guilt in this case,”
he told Interfax.
RIA Novosti / Aleksey Nikolsky
In
2010, Khodorkovsky’s prison term was prolonged after he was found
guilty of large-scale theft of oil and money laundering in a separate
case. The former tycoon's 11-year jail term officially expires in
August 2014.
Putin
opponents believe that Khodorkovsky became the victim of a campaign
to punish him for perceived political challenges to the incumbent
president.
The
news on the pardon prospects has immediately gone viral across the
media, with rights activists particularly welcoming Putin’s move.
“I’m
really happy that this painful and tragic saga is nearing its end.
I’m grateful to everyone who has contributed to that,”
Human Rights Ombudsman Vladimir Lukin told Interfax.
Pardoning
Khodorkovsky may become a strategic decision, indicating new moods
within theh society, believes Kirill Kabanov, the head of National
anti-corruption committee and a member of the presidential Council on
Human Rights.
The
pardoning of Russia’s most famous prisoner, as well as the earlier
signed presidential amnesty that came into effect today, will improve
the investment climate in the country, business representatives
believe. The Russian stock market was lifted by the news.
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