I
don’t want to eulogise Vladimir Putin. He is far from the ideal
leader.
But
he IS simply the best leader Russia has had in a long time and his
position in the polls reflects this.
His
reputation does need defending against the attacks from the liberal
chatting class who tend to project the qualities of Boris Yeltsin
onto Vladimir Putin.
Putin
Has a Massive Corruption-Fighting Record You've Never Heard Of
Mr.
Putin is tackling corruption, whereas his predecessor embodied it.
But you wouldn't know it from the Western press
2
December, 2015
I
love Russia, but let’s not sugarcoat things.
After
the widespread sociopathy of the 1990s—when people had to break all
rules just to feed their families, and it was not unknown even for
priests to steal from their flocks—a too-high proportion of the
Russian population remains in a state of going through each day with
little thought other than how to cheat and defraud its fellow man.
Yet it is also a fact that you cannot lock up everyone (Всех не
посадишь, as the Russians say) or you would have no
country left.
The
Kremlin’s solution has been to make conspicuous examples of some,
while creating parallel structures to work around corrupt or
incompetent state bodies and officials.
Probably
the most prominent example of such a structure is the Investigative
Committee of the Russian Federation,
commonly known by its Russian initials, SK or SK RF, or less commonly
by the acronym, Sledkom.
The
SK traces its history to 2007—when authority to make criminal
charges was taken away from Russia’s Prosecutor General—and has
existed in its current form since early 2011.
Today,
the Office of the Prosecutor General is responsible for prosecutions
only. It is the SK that investigates crimes and decides whom to
bring to trial and on what charges.
Since
it was brought out from under the Prosecutor General and made into an
independent body reporting only to the President, the SK has been at
the very center of the Kremlin’s anticorruption drive.
But
why was the authority to indict—representing the most fundamental
procedure in the exercise of any state’s power—taken away from
the Prosecutor General? What’s the use in a prosecutor who
can't bring charges?
To
illustrate the answers, we borrow from the renowned Russian
opposition figure, Aleksei Naval’nyi (commonly spelled Navalny in
the U.S.), and his Foundation for the Fight Against Corruption.
For
those who recoil from Naval’nyi as some kind of “fifth column”
taking orders from the U.S., keep in mind that despite efforts to
clip his outsized ego and ambitions, the Russian state has allowed
his organization considerable freedom to go about its investigations
and to secure funding for its salaries, research/travel,
website/multimedia, etc.
Moreover,
it is indicative that few of Naval’nyi’s targets have been
willing or able to go all the way in terms of suing him for slander
(a typical method of silencing critics in many countries.)
To
me, this suggests that Naval’nyi is recognized as having some value
to society or even to the state. However, as I have indicated,
the state is unable to follow up on every corruption allegation—then
there would be no state at all.
And
so, on December 1st, 2015, the Foundation released a 44-minute
documentary film titled Chaika:
A Criminal Drama in Five Parts.
The
name Chaika refers to Yurii Chaika, current Prosecutor General
of Russia.
The
allegations are serious.
As
often happens in Russia, they fall not so much on the official title
holder, as on his family and connections as well as those of
his underlings.
It
turns out that Olga Lopatina, ex-wife of Deputy
Prosecutor General Gennadii Lopatin (they
divorced in 2011), co-owned—perhaps still co-owns—what seems to
be a
sugar mill or distributor with
the wives of two leaders of the infamous Tsapok gang.
The
Tsapok gang lorded over much of Krasnodar province from the late
1990s until its aforementioned leaders were jailed for their role in
the 2010Kushchevskaya
massacre,
in which twelve people including a baby were knifed to death in an
act of delayed revenge for the husband and father of some of the
victims having stood up to the gang after they harassed his sister
some years prior.
The
Lopatina-Tsapok connection may help explain why the gang was able to
get away with so much for so long. Incidentally, the
Kushchevskaya massacre was one of the first ultra-high-profile cases
to be investigated by the SK in more or less its present form.
According
to Naval’ny’s film, Ms. Lopatina also owns a splendid villa in
Greece, which is located not far from a luxury
hotel allegedly
owned by Prosecutor General Chaika’s older son, Artem, who is said
to have remodeled it recently at a cost of between 25 and 29
million Euro.
Reports
of Artem Chaika’s business empire and alleged corrupt dealings are
not new, having been made in Russian media on many previous
occasions. It has been alleged that Artem’s holdings bring in
$200 million per year in revenues. However, the claims of hotel
ownership—as well as Lopatina's sugar business—seem to be new.
There
are still more allegations in Naval’ny’s film, but you get
the gist.
The
practice of politicians and government officials using their pull and
connections to enrich themselves or their families is
not unique to Russia.
And it may be hard to say what is legal and what is illegal
in any given case.
But
what is certain is that Prosecutor General Chaika was not the man to
lead the Kremlin’s anticorruption drive. And it’s not just
him, but his entire agency.
The
Kremlin needed something non-entrenched and squeaky-clean, so it
built up the SK, handing it over 20,000 employees, many if not
most of them transferred from the Office of the Prosecutor General.
And
in its roughly five years of existence in its current form, I am not
aware of the SK having been caught up in any sort of dirt. It
is doing its job, with few if any “conflicts of interest”,
so to speak. It is also shockingly transparent, with its
spokesman being a fixture in the Russian media.
Another
structure built up by the Kremlin is Russia’s “Social Chamber”
(although there are other possible
translations of
its name.)
Founded
in 2005, this is a sort of top-down civil society organization that,
among other things, monitors state corruption, malfeasance, and
incompetence in Russia’s regions. It is, in effect, a
semi-official activist group with patronage from Moscow.
The
intent is for Russia’s small-time government bosses to understand
that, as the eye of the Kremlin cannot survey everything at once,
someone else (besides weak and underfunded local media) is
watching them.
Judging
by the fact that its activists have been harassed by Russian
provincial and local authorities, the Social Chamber has had some
success. However, the jury is still out as to whether it can
make a big difference overall.
Of
course, Americans would say that corruption should be fought from the
bottom-up, by way of a well-funded independent media, a strong civil
society, direct elections of all local and provincial chiefs, and
more decision-making and fiscal power devolved to local authorities,
who are simply closer to their own constituents and more responsive
to their needs.
However,
Russia’s experience with decentralization in the 1990s was
catastrophic, and Mr. Putin has staked his entire political career on
not repeating it.
One
could also say that until Russia has built up a truly solid middle
class, efforts to devolve power to local authorities will simply be
co-opted by the oligarchs, leading to direct oligarchic rule as was
the case in the 1990s, and is the case in Ukraine today. (Witness
President Poroshenko and Governor Kolomoisky, for starters.)
Thus,
while I am not saying that Mr. Putin is 100-percent right, we need to
understand where he is coming from.
Despite
all the limitations of his position and of the Russian state as a
whole, he is truly a corruption-fighter, and in this regard, is a
head-and-shoulders improvement over his predecessor, who simply drank
himself under the table while outsourcing authority to the oligarchs
with their bought-and-paid-for ministers and media outlets—a
practice which the Western press referred to as “democracy.
This
is worthwhile watching
The
Rise of Putin and The Fall of The Russian-Jewish Oligarchs
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