Sunday 22 December 2013

Khodorkovsky Next Move


Russian former oil tycoon Mikhail Khodorkovsky has said he will do all he can to free other political prisoners.
At a Berlin news conference, he said he would stay out of politics and that "the struggle for power is not for me".
He said he only found out he was going to Berlin the day he was freed, adding that he would only go back to Russia if he was sure he could leave again.
Khodorkovsky was pardoned and released on Friday, after 10 years in prison for fraud and tax evasion.

Khodorkovsky said he would not be getting involved in politics in Russia. But much of what he said was political in a broader sense than the day-to-day of party politics.
He pointedly said that political prisoners remain in Russia, and that he hoped Western leaders would remember that when they visited President Putin. He said that he hoped the forthcoming Sochi Winter Olympics wouldn't become a "great party for President Putin".
He also said he couldn't go back to Russia because there was no guarantee that he would be allowed to leave again, and that old charges wouldn't be reactivated against him.
It was clear that Khodorkovsky is not putting himself as an alternative in exile to President Putin - but he is not shying away from broader politics either. This is a man who isn't going quietly.
He always insisted that his conviction was politically motivated.
At the time of his arrest he was Russia's richest man. and he used some of his wealth to fund opposition parties.

Khodorkovsky held his news conference at the Berlin Wall museum at Checkpoint Charlie, the former crossing point between East and West Berlin and a symbolic Cold War location.
The BBC's Stephen Evans in Berlin said it is clear that the former prisoner is happy to become a symbol of those who are still imprisoned.

He said there was a need "to make sure that in Russia and in any other countries in the world there won't be political prisoners".
"I will do everything I can so that there are none left," he added.
Khodorkovsky said he was not advocating a boycott of next year's Winter Olympics in the Russian city of Sochi, but warned against letting the event become "a great party for President Putin".
He insisted he would not get involved in Russian politics himself, saying: "The struggle for power is not for me".
"I didn't have to be out-of-proportion emotional about this because I realised that my family wasn't suffering"
He also said he would not return to business as "my financial situation doesn't require me to work just to earn some more money".
He spoke about the suddenness of his release and the unexpectedness of his destination.
"It was 2am when the commandant of our camp woke me up and he told me I was going home. After that, on the trip, I found out that this trip was supposed to end in Berlin," he said.

He added that he would not return to his homeland until he was certain he could leave again at any time and that further charges would not be brought against him.
Asked about his feelings for Mr Putin, he said that because his family had not suffered during his incarceration he was able to avoid getting over-emotional and be pragmatic.
The former tycoon also thanked supporters, including German Chancellor Angela Merkel, for helping to secure his release.
As well as Mrs Merkel, he mentioned former German Foreign Minister Hans Dietrich Genscher.
"He made it possible for us to have reached this point now," he said of Mr Genscher.
Earlier, the former billionaire told a Russian magazine he did not intend to fight for the return of assets from his disbanded oil company, Yukos.
Khodorkovsky had been in prison since 2003 and was due to be released next August, but requested a pardon because his mother is suffering from cancer.
President Vladimir Putin surprised Russians last week by agreeing to the pardon.
In a statement after his release on Friday, Khodorkovsky stressed he had not admitted guilt

SOURCE:www.bbc.com

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