Swiss
to Investigate Igor Kolomoisky's Permit to Live in Geneva
28
June, 2014
By
John Helmer, Moscow
The
Swiss Federal Police and the Federal Office for Migration will
shortly decide whether the residency permit issued to Igor Kolomoisky
to live in Geneva will be extended beyond the current expiry date.
Kolomoisky’s permit comes up for renewal in October, and four
months of investigation may be required by the Swiss authorities to
authorize his stay.
Regular
reviews of foreign residency permits in Switzerland are required
every one or two years, according to government sources referring to
Swiss law and regulations. But in Kolomoisky’s case, the Swiss
authorities are obliged to determine whether Kolomoisky’s
activities since March as the governor of the eastern Ukraine region
of Dniepropetrovsk, and a recent Russian indictment of Kolomoisky for
war crimes, represent a violation of the rules and disallow him for
residency.
Last
week, the Investigative Committee (IC) of the Russian procuracy
announced that it is issuing an international warrant for
Kolomoisky’s arrest on war crimes. The indictment charges
Kolomoisky under articles 33, 105, 126, 144, and 356 of the Russian
Criminal Code with conspiracy to murder; commission of war crimes;
and kidnapping. According to IC spokesman Vladimir Markin, “over
forty investigators continue to carry out investigative operations
with people who are arriving from Ukraine to the Rostov Region, the
Republic of Crimea, as well as to Belgorod, Voronezh, Bryansk, Kursk
and other regions. As of the present moment, 2,400 witnesses have
been questioned; 1,470 people have been found to be victims [of
crime], including 208 minors. More than a thousand people have handed
Russian investigators their claims to be addressed to the
International Criminal Court and the European Court of Human Rights.
Moreover, measures are being taken to identify certain individuals
from among the number of officers and soldiers of the Ukrainian Armed
Forces, the National Guard of Ukraine and Right Sector militants, who
took part in the military operation against civilians in southeastern
Ukraine. The investigation is ongoing.”
Charged
in the Russian indictment with Kolomoisky is Arsen Avakov, the
Minister of Interior appointed after the ouster of President Victor
Yanukovich on February 21.
Asked
if the indictment has been filed with the governments of Switzerland,
where Kolomoisky has lived for more than a decade, and of Cyprus and
Israel, which have issued him with passports, Markin declined to give
details; he confirmed that the warrant, plus supporting evidence for
extradition, will be filed with Interpol and with the Swiss
authorities. Yesterday Markin announced that the indictment of
Kolomoisky has been submitted for an initial ruling by the Basmanny
court in Moscow. A hearing on the indictment and request for a
warrant for Kolomoisky’s arrest is scheduled for the morning of
July 2. Kolomoisky may engage a lawyer to represent him at the
hearing. If he does not, the court will appoint a public defender.
Ukraine's
Secret Weapon: Feisty Oligarch Ihor Kolomoisky
27
June, 2014
DNIPROPETROVSK,
Ukraine—Leaning over a map of eastern Ukraine on his desk, Gennady
Korban gripped a ballpoint pen and drew a squiggling blue line down
its center.
The
border, he said, marked the battlefront in his country's war with
pro-Russia separatists. One side was stable, rid of "troublemakers,"
he said. On the other are "maniacs," he said. "Men
without families, who don't want families, they just like war."
If they cross over the line, he said, "we'll just have to kill
them."
He
called the border "Kolomoisky's line"—after his
billionaire boss, who is emerging as one of the more unlikely
protagonists to emerge from Ukraine's fight for survival.
When
its high-profile conflict with Russia began, the fledgling government
in Kiev was caught flat-footed, with an
army with little fighting experience or
funding. Enter Ihor Kolomoisky, a 51-year-old outspoken banking
tycoon. Now recently appointed by the country's president as governor
of Dnipropetrovsk region in eastern Ukraine, he has decided to dip
into his fortune to bolster that army and defend the homeland.
So
far, that has included buying tires, car batteries and fuel for army
units, as well outfitting local militias. He also announced a program
to buy up contraband weapons and offer a $10,000 bounty for any
pro-Russia militant captured with a gun. Without disclosing numbers,
Mr. Kolomoisky's deputies call the program a success, though they say
a few drunks have tried to turn in some compatriots for reward.
Notable
for having a massive shark aquarium in his office, Mr. Kolomoisky has
arrived on the scene as the conflict
with Russia drags into
its fourth month. (On Friday, Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko
extended a week-long cease-fire with pro-Russia fighters until Monday
night.) Certainly the country, with a dire shortage of battle-ready
troops, could use a billionaire's backing—and this particular one
has no shortage of ideas. Earlier this month, he announced a plan to
build a 1,200-mile electrified fence spanning the border of Russia
and Ukraine.
But
critics question Mr. Kolomoisky's motives, pointing out that he and
other oligarchs in Ukraine may have more financial than altruistic
reasons for maintaining the status quo. For years now, critics say,
the oligarchs' powerful influence over many industries have blocked
economic reforms in a country that has one of Europe's lowest average
per capita incomes.
"These
are precisely the opposite of the sorts of people would you want to
appoint" as governors, said Mark Kramer, professor of Cold War
studies at Harvard University. "It's hard for me to see why
those who fought for change in Ukraine would want such people in
charge."
To
oversee military operations, Mr. Kolomoisky appointed Mr. Korban, who
describes himself as a conflict manager in hostile corporate
takeovers. In widely reported incidents, Mr. Korban narrowly escaped
two assassination attempts during his career—when his car was
machine-gunned and when someone planted a bomb under a table. "I
know one thing, we can only win this war with a real army," said
Mr. Korban. But, he said, until the army is ready for an offensive,
he and Mr. Kolomoisky are taking temporary measures.
In
a rare interview, Mr. Kolomoisky declined to say how much he is
spending personally to build up what his aides call the "Kolomoisky
army," but experts estimate it is about $10 million a month just
to fund the salaries of militia and police units, some of whom
technically report to Ukraine's army and interior ministry. His
province now has close to 2,000 battle-ready troops in the field, his
aides say. By comparison, Ukraine's army had only 6,000 through the
entire country when Russia took
control of the Crimean peninsulaearlier
this year.
For
their part, Ukraine government officials say they are happy to have
his help. Mr. Kolomoisky didn't address any specific criticism about
him, but did say his job as governor has mainly hurt, not helped, his
business interests. Still, Privat Bank, the bank he controls, could
stand to gain from aid being pumped into Ukraine that will partly be
used to recapitalize the country's banks regardless of the Russian
threat. This spring, for example, the International Monetary Fund
approved $17 billion in aid to Ukraine, and the World Bank and Group
of Seven leading nations plan to pump in another $15 billion soon.
A
rotund man who is fond of home-cooked meals, Mr. Kolomoisky said he
had been directing his businesses from a home in Switzerland, but
returned to Ukraine in March to take the governor's job. He said he
is ready to quit it as soon as the threat of pro-Russia separatism
subsides in Ukraine.
He
took the governor's post, he said, on principle to oppose Russia's
policy of bullying Ukraine away from closer ties to Europe. He said
he believes along with most Ukrainians that the country must follow
the development of European countries that had been under Moscow's
heel as members of the Warsaw Pact. "It would have been possible
to have warmer relations with Russia, but I'm not going to sacrifice
my principles for it," he said. "I'm a die-hard European."
He
described the rise of oligarchs like himself in Ukraine as a natural
stage in the transition of some countries to democracy, similar to
the robber barons of the U.S. at the beginning of the 1900s. Today, a
handful of tycoons control most of the heavy industries and media of
Ukraine. But Mr. Kolomoisky said he hopes such oligarchs will
ultimately disappear as a class.
Not
one to mince words, the tycoon quickly drew attention when he took
office, saying in his first local television appearance that Russian
President Vladimir
Putin was
a "schizophrenic of short stature" and was "completely
incapable, totally insane." Mr. Putin, who stands 5 feet 7
inches, shot back, calling Mr. Kolomoisky a "unique impostor"
and expressing amazement that "such a scoundrel could be
appointed governor." Russian authorities then put the Moscow
subsidiary of Mr. Kolomoisky's Privat Bank under temporary
administration, saying it was having liquidity problems. The unit was
sold to a Russian company, protecting customers.
Mr.
Kolomoisky's acquaintances say he never showed much interest in
politics, but he did like to make money. In Ukraine's loosely
regulated market, he thrived as a pioneer with aggressive takeover
tactics such as getting obscure provincial courts to change a
company's share registrar, or hiring armed guards to seize company
offices, said Tom Warner, a former Ukraine analyst for Sito Capital,
an emerging markets fund manager. Mr. Korban, the billionaire's
takeover manager, says all of these tactics were legal. "In the
rest of the world it's called mergers and acquisitions," he
said.
About
10 years after founding with some friends Privat Bank, and expanding
his empire into numerous businesses, Mr. Kolomoisky began in 2000 to
think about raising his political profile. Dmitry Vydrin, a political
consultant from Kiev, said Mr. Kolomoisky invited him for a chat in
his office in Dnipropetrovsk, where the banking magnate listened, but
also periodically pressed a button on a remote-control box on his
desk that dropped crayfish meat to the sharks in his aquarium. "It
was unnerving," said Mr. Vydrin.
Mr.
Kolomoisky steered clear of open party politics, but did acquire a
nationally broadcast television station and a news service. That "has
more influence than having a party in parliament," Mr. Korban
explained to a Ukrainian newspaper in 2007.
In
the interview, Mr. Kolomoisky said he and his partners never offered
any financial support to protesters before the president, Viktor
Yanukovych, was ousted, but he did support them through his
television channel. He said discussions about becoming governor
started in January—the month before the president fled—but
declined to say whom they were with.
By
the time he arrived in the governor's office, pro-Russia groups were
seizing control of government buildings in nearby provinces, and
moving to do the same in Dnipropetrovsk. He moved quickly on several
fronts, said a deputy governor, Boris Filatov.
Mr.
Filatov said he was assigned to defuse tensions by holding meetings
with various political groups and listening to their complaints. He
and Mr. Kolomoisky met with veterans groups and promised more
patriotic education in the schools, and with Communists, to whom he
promised to pay respects to some historic monuments. Local fascists
"wanted to do more sports," Mr. Filatov said. "So we
gave them gyms."
As
Mr. Filatov tells it, pro-Russia demonstrations in the city at first
drew about 1,500 people, but soon their numbers dwindled to 500, then
300, "and soon there weren't any meetings at all."
Critics
of Mr. Kolomoisky said there was a more brutal campaign behind the
scenes. Viktor Marchenko led meetings of his local chapter of Union
of Soviet Officers, clamoring for a return to Soviet borders, until
some unidentified men punched him in the head at one event, he said.
He blamed Mr. Kolomoisky, who is Jewish, and said "there will be
consequences" for the Jewish community one day. The tycoon
didn't discuss the incident in the interview.
Oleg
Tsarev, a local pro-Russia parliament member, also led some meetings,
but left Ukraine after he was beaten by a mob in Kiev. After
decamping to Moscow he received a phone call from Mr. Kolomoisky, a
recording of which was posted on the Internet.
In
a conversation laced with invective, Mr. Kolomoisky told him that a
Jewish soldier from the Dnipro Battalion had been killed in fighting
and that members of the Jewish community had put a reward of a
million dollars on Tsarev's head. "They will be looking for you
everywhere," Mr. Kolomoisky said. "Don't go anywhere."
Mr.
Kolomoisky confirmed the tape was real. Mr. Korban said there was
nothing wrong with the phone call. "He was just giving him his
opinion, he wasn't threatening him," Mr. Korban said.
Mr.
Korban said business contacts from Privat Group, an informal nebula
of companies controlled by Mr. Kolomoisky and his partners, have been
useful in supplying the army and militia units, allowing him to
contact heads of major local chains to cut deals for military
supplies. The tycoon's team also funneled volunteers into a local
militia, called the Dnipro Battalion, that were outfitted with gray
SUVs and new uniforms. More lightly armed militias were cobbled
together as well, to man checkpoints around the province.
Today
the Dnipro Battalion has not only the 2,000 battle-ready troops,
equipped with heavy weapons, but more than 20,000 in reserve. If any
Russian soldier wants to die for Russia, said Yury Beryoza, the
commander of the battalion, "they should come to Dnipropetrovsk,
because here we will kill them."
The
Dnipro Batallion saw its first major action when separatists took
control of a police station in the port city of Mariupol, in an
adjacent province. The station was burned to the ground with its
occupants. In all, 54 volunteers from Dnipropetrovsk have been killed
since the beginning of the fighting.
Mr.
Korban said Dnipropetrovsk is expanding the borders of its influence,
with regional militias taking over four regions inside the adjacent
province of Donetsk and installing regional administration heads who
are friendly to Mr. Kolomoisky. Mr. Korban called it a "buffer
zone" and said they were prepared to take four more regions.
He
said Mr. Kolomoisky has brought in Romanian and Georgian military
advisers to help with the training of troops, who in the Dnipro
Battallion until recently only had a week of boot camp. He also
invited Georgia's former president, Mikheil Saakashvili, to visit and
bring some of his former advisers to help them streamline the
bureaucracy of the Dnipropetrovsk government.
Mr.
Saakashvili, whose country was invaded in 2008 after years of
cross-border altercations with Russia, said he spent two days in
Dnipropetrovsk last month, and said the situation looked a lot like
Georgia's before the war.
He
said that Mr. Putin was able to seize Crimea and destabilize eastern
provinces by acting quickly, but that Mr. Kolomoisky appears to have
halted his progress by moving faster than anyone expected.
As
an oligarch who has insulted Mr. Putin's height "he is really
everything that Putin hates," said Mr. Saakashvili, who believes
now that Mr. Kolomoisky's appearance is a bad development for the
Russian leader. "I used to think that I was Putin's No. 1
enemy," he said, "but now I think an oligarch just pushed
me aside."
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