Central Banker Andrei Kozlov Shot Dead
Apart from the story below being grizly in itself the picture that went with it just makes the reality all the more apparent. I don’t think you would see such an image in the Australian media but here in Russia it is common place.
By Valeria Korchagina and Maria Levitov
Staff Writers
Mikhail Fomichyov / Itar-Tass
Prime Minister Mikhail Fradkov leading Cabinet ministers in a moment of
silence for Central Bank First Deputy Chairman Andrei Kozlov on
Thursday.
Andrei Kozlov, who had spearheaded the campaign against fraudulent banks
and money laundering as the No. 2 official at the Central Bank, died of
gunshot wounds early Thursday.
Kozlov, 41, the bank’s first deputy head, and his driver, Alexander
Semyonov, 54, were shot by two gunmen with automatic pistols Wednesday
evening as Kozlov was exiting the Spartak sports complex.
Kozlov had been at the complex, in northeast Moscow, to take part in a
friendly football match with other banking community members. After the
shooting, Kozlov was rushed to a hospital, where he died hours later.
It was the highest-profile slaying since President Vladimir Putin took
power in 2000, and reminiscent of the more violent 1990s, under Boris
Yeltsin.
A longtime Central Bank official, Kozlov oversaw the closure of 44 banks
accused of improper activities this year alone. He had also pushed for
mandatory deposit insurance for banks, which was particularly important
to millions of Russians who lost their savings in financial crises in
the 1990s.
Most recently, he had lobbied for a permanent ban on those convicted of
tax evasion from working in the banking sector.
Kozlov’s killing has raised concerns among many in the banking sector
that these reforms and others could be stalled.
While the investigation has just begun, several senior government
officials and banking sector experts said Kozlov died because of his
work.
“He was a very brave and honest man, and through his activity he
repeatedly encroached on the interests of unprincipled financiers,”
Finance Minister Alexei Kudrin said in a statement Thursday.
Prime Minister Mikhail Fradkov, in televised comments, on Thursday
called for a minute of silence in honor of Kozlov at a government
meeting. Cabinet members appeared shocked and sad.
Fradkov also praised the Central Bank for its efforts to make the
banking system more transparent.
“This is truly a very complicated task,” the prime minister said.
“Creation of fair conditions is not always accepted by those who wish
to have certain advantages and privileges.”
Fradkov ordered Interior Minister Rashid Nurgaliyev to do whatever
necessary to apprehend those involved in the deadly attack. Prosecutor
General Yury Chaika has personally taken charge of the case.
Anatoly Chubais, head of Unified Energy Systems, the national
electricity monopoly, was visibly shocked Thursday as he spoke of the
banker, also in televised comments.
“His murder is an impudent challenge to all of Russia’s authorities,”
said Chubais, who knew Kozlov. “It is a case when the response of the
authorities must be tough, prompt and pitiless.”
http://www.themoscowtimes.com/photos/large/2006_09/2006_09_15/shot_2.jpg
Reuters
Investigators working at the site of the shooting late Wednesday.
Kozlov’s driver was shot twice and died on the spot.
Chubais, who was himself attacked last year in what looked to be an
unsuccessful attempt on his life, also stressed that Kozlov was one of
the most honest people he knew: “Most likely his absolute dedication to
principles and his absolute professionalism put him against those who do
not accept such approaches.”
On Thursday, details of the killing were still being pieced together by
investigators.
A police spokesman said Thursday that Kozlov and his driver were
attacked at 8:47 p.m., at the parking lot near a fenced-in soccer
field.
Kozlov was shot in the head, chest and stomach. He was taken to the
city’s Hospital No. 33, where doctors operated on him for five hours.
He died at 5:30 a.m. without ever having regained consciousness.
Semyonov, the driver, died on the spot.
Investigators have retrieved from the site a silencer and several
9-millimeter bullets and spent shells, the police spokesman said. The
Prosecutor General’s Office said in a statement later Thursday that two
pistols — a makeshift contraption and a Baikal air pistol that had been
reconfigured to fire real ammunition — were found 250 to 300 meters
from the crime scene, at 3 Oleny Val Street.
The crime scene remained off-limits to reporters Thursday, but those who
showed up at the complex to take part in a sporting activity were
admitted. Investigators were spotted working Thursday afternoon in the
cordoned-off area where the attack took place; they refused to answer
questions, forcing one reporter off the premises with guard dogs.
A security guard who asked not to be named said the complex was popular
among Moscow’s rich and powerful. “Sometimes we get cars with blue
lights,” he said, referring to the government-issue lights on car roofs
that give drivers the right to go as fast as they want.
The complex, near Sokolniki park, is festooned with ponds and shaded
woodlands. “A very suitable place to murder somebody,” said Natalya
Sveridova, pushing a baby carriage with her 6-month-old daughter
inside. “You can escape through the trees, get in a car and go north,
out of the city, or back into the city.”
Denis Grishkin / Vedomosti
Andrei Kozlov
Kozlov apparently did not consider himself to be in danger. The Central
Bank said Thursday that, although it provides senior officials with
bodyguards, Kozlov had refused the protection, Interfax reported.
“Usually, central banking is a quiet job, but unfortunately in Russia,
it’s not,” Moritz Schularick, an economist with the London-based asset
manager Amiya Capital, said in between meetings at a UBS conference in
Moscow.
Chubais’ comments were echoed by those of Richard Hainsworth, CEO of
RusRating banks rating agency.
“This is not an ordinary death,” Hainsworth said in an open letter.
“This is not just another assassination. It is an act of terror. It is
the elimination of a true son of Russia who has stood up to the forces
of evil in his country and who began to build the foundations of true
prosperity for Russia’s people.”
http://www.themoscowtimes.com/photos/large/2006_09/2006_09_15/shot_2.jpg
Andrei Vernikov, a friend of Kozlov and an economist, called him a
professional seeking to make Russia more fair and transparent.
And Vladimir Kievsky, vice president of the Association of Russian
Banks, said Kozlov had helped the country move closer to a “civilized
global banking system.”
“His contribution is immense,” Kievsky said. “Andrei Andreyevich charted
a course [for banking reform]. It will be very difficult without him,
but we must continue this work,” he said.
Born in Moscow on Jan. 6, 1965, Kozlov, started his career at the State
Bank of the Soviet Union in 1989. He joined the Central Bank after the
1991 Soviet collapse, reaching the bank’s highest echelons by the
mid-1990s and becoming first deputy head in 1997.
From 1999 to 2001, Kozlov took a break from government. During that time, he served as board chairman of the Russky Standard bank and also worked for a subsidiary of Aeroflot.
Kozlov is survived by his wife, Yekaterina, and three children.
Staff Writers Nabi Abdullaev, David Nowak and Miriam Elder contributed
to this report.
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