пятница, 23 сентября 2016 г.

Как Владимир Путин своему зятю 1, 75 млрд долларов перевел Президент России Владимир Путин личным поручением выделил компании Сибур 1,75 млрд долларов из Фонда национального благосостояния. Одним из акционеров Сибура является Кирилл Шамалов, муж дочери Путина Катерины Тихоновой — таким образом Президент России лично дал кредит своему зятю. Здесь очевиден конфликт интересов, о котором Путин по закону должен сообщить публично. Алексей Навальный требует признать конфликт интересов в судебном порядке Бабушка под Костромой замерзла потому что у неё отключили электроэнергию за задолжность в 83 рубля. Россия простила долг Монголии в несколько сотен миллионов долларов и подарила почти 2 миллиарда долларов одной очень крутой компании. Так и живем!! Да не говори ...ВОРЬЕ сидит у власти разворовывающая бюджет и все что только можно ... ВСЕ продают за границу , а вырученные деньги под разными проектами разворовываются , причем на столь успешно , что диву даешься где здесь прокуратура и знаменитое кгб... Читать расследование https://navalny.com/p/4724/ Текст искового заявления — https://docs.google.com/document/d/1k... Жалоба в прокуратуру — https://docs.google.com/document/d/19... Жалоба в Администрацию Президента — https://docs.google.com/document/d/1q... Твиттер Алексея Навального https://twitter.com/navalny Сайт Фонда борьбы с коррупцией https://fbk.info/ Поддержать Фонд борьбы с коррупией https://donate.fbk.info https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VeIWX3L1Hhk Putin’s daughter, a young billionaire and the president’s friends https://docs.google.com/document/d/1kRwkfwZPBQiLuApKcL0isd0C5A4digY0W-cm_rN3Or4/edit https://docs.google.com/document/d/19x1aRTObzBCY0FI2h_FJ5uNcwQWMT_YCUW4YhDVzEko/edit https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FQ984-2-Wak&feature=youtu.be http://www.reuters.com/investigates/special-report/russia-capitalism-daughters/#article-the-czarlings LONDON/MOSCOW – Since Vladimir Putin began cementing his grip on Russia in the 1990s, many of his friends have grown famously rich. Not so the president himself, say his supporters, who insist Putin is above the money grab that has marked his reign. His public financial disclosures depict a man of modest means. In April, Putin declared an income for 2014 of 7.65 million roubles ($119,000). He listed the ownership of two modest apartments and a share in a car parking garage. His daughter Katerina is doing considerably better, supported by some of the Russian president’s wealthy friends, a Reuters examination shows. After unconfirmed media speculation about Katerina’s identity, a senior Russian figure told Reuters that she uses the surname Tikhonova. Andrey Akimov, deputy chairman of Russian lender Gazprombank, said he had met Katerina when she was little and more recently, and that Tikhonova was Putin’s daughter. Reuters has also learned that earlier this year Katerina, 29, described herself as the “spouse” of Kirill Shamalov, son of Nikolai Shamalov, a longtime friend of the president. Shamalov senior is a shareholder in Bank Rossiya, which U.S. officials have described as the personal bank of the Russian elite. As husband and wife, Kirill and Katerina would have corporate holdings worth about $2 billion, according to estimates provided to Reuters by financial analysts. That wealth stems mainly from a large publicly disclosed stake in a major gas and petrochemical company that Kirill acquired from Gennady Timchenko, another longtime friend of Putin. Related content https://navalny.com/p/4724/ 1. Graphic: Katerina Tikhonova’s high-level connections 2. Putin’s elder daughter Maria: biomedical scientist and academic 3. Rising stars of the Russian elite’s next generation Also among the young couple’s holdings is a seaside villa in Biarritz, France, estimated to be worth about $3.7 million. That asset, too, was acquired by Kirill from Timchenko, a commodities trader who has known the president since at least the 1990s. Katerina is also thriving in academia and running publicly funded projects at Moscow State University. A Reuters examination of public documents shows that the president’s younger daughter has signed contracts worth several million dollars from state-owned organisations for work at the university to be carried out by organisations she directs. There is no indication she has made any personal financial gain from this work. She holds a senior position at the university, and helps direct a $1.7 billion plan to expand its campus. Katerina’s official advisers at Moscow State University include five members of Putin’s inner circle – including two former KGB officers who knew her when she was a toddler. They served with her father in the 1980s when he was deployed to Dresden, East Germany. Putin’s elder daughter, Maria, is linked to Moscow State University as well. She is a graduate of the school’s Fundamental Medicine Department and is forging a career in endocrinology, according to publicly available documents. Katerina, Maria and Kirill Shamalov all declined to comment for this article. Asked about the Biarritz home, a spokesman for Timchenko said he would not comment on personal matters. The stock acquisitions, state business deals, French property and oligarch connections offer a rare glimpse into the lives of Putin’s children. The president has been very protective of his private life and his daughters, who seldom appear in the media. The transactions also provide insight into the family finances of Russia’s most powerful man and the elite that has formed around him. Katerina and Kirill, 33, are among a new generation of Russians enjoying a rapid rise in the wake of their well-connected parents. The phenomenon bears similarities to the “princelings” of China – the children and grandchildren of Communist Party leaders who have gone on to gain positions of power and amass great wealth. PARTED: Vladimir Putin and Lyudmila, his former wife and mother of his two daughters, pictured in 2011. The couple divorced in 2014. REUTERS/Sergei Karpukhin “It’s more than just a dynastic succession. Children don’t just inherit their parents’ posts, but also the right to choose any other post they fancy.” Alexei Navalny, opposition leader Olga Kryshtanovskaya, a sociologist and former member of Putin’s United Russia political party, told Reuters that a “new aristocracy” was emerging in politics and state companies, with a second generation inheriting the status of the current circle around Putin. “Many in society think they haven't worked for it, and they question who these people really are,” she said. Among other children of the Putin circle with growing influence are: Boris Kovalchuk, son of Yuri Kovalchuk, the largest shareholder of Bank Rossiya and a close Putin associate; Gleb Frank, son of former transport minister Sergei Frank and son-in-law of commodity billionaire Timchenko; Igor Rotenberg, son of the billionaire Arkady Rotenberg, Putin’s former judo partner; Sergei S. Ivanov, son of Kremlin Chief of Staff Sergei B. Ivanov. (See related story below) In an interview with Reuters, Alexei Navalny, a Russian opposition leader, described what he called a “neo-feudal system” that threatens to dominate state offices and big business. “Today in Russia, it is absolutely normal that the boards of directors at state banks are headed by children of security service officials, who aren’t even 30 years old when they are appointed,” he said. “It is more than just a dynastic succession. Children don’t just inherit their parents’ posts, but also the right to choose any other post they fancy. The danger is that very soon all key resources will end up in the hands of five to seven families.” Reuters asked the Kremlin whether Katerina Tikhonova was the daughter of Putin and whether she is married to Kirill Shamalov, and other questions. Dmitry Peskov, press secretary of the Russian Federation, replied: “We have no information whatsoever about the personal life, family connection, marital status, academic activities, involvement in particular projects and family tree of Ms Tikhonova, or about other individuals mentioned in your letter. “In recent years there has been an enormous quantity of gossip on the subject of the family ties of V. Putin, and, in particular, his daughters. The proportion of accurate information in all these publications is laughably small.” “TALENTED RESEARCHER” Katerina has largely escaped public attention since her father became president in 2000. In 2011, Putin told Russian television that Katerina had read Oriental studies, specialising in Japanese and history, at St. Petersburg University. Little else was known about her adult life until a Russian blogger, Oleg Kashin, reported in January that the president’s younger daughter was active at Moscow State University and had taken the surname Tikhonova, derived from the name of her grandmother, Yekaterina Tikhonovna Shkrebneva.



Как Владимир Путин своему зятю 1, 75 млрд долларов перевел

Президент России Владимир Путин личным поручением выделил компании Сибур 1,75 млрд долларов из Фонда национального благосостояния. Одним из акционеров Сибура является Кирилл Шамалов, муж дочери Путина Катерины Тихоновой — таким образом Президент России лично дал кредит своему зятю. Здесь очевиден конфликт интересов, о котором Путин по закону должен сообщить публично. Алексей Навальный требует признать конфликт интересов в судебном порядке

Бабушка под Костромой замерзла потому что у неё отключили электроэнергию за задолжность в 83 рубля. Россия простила долг Монголии в несколько сотен миллионов долларов и подарила почти 2 миллиарда долларов одной очень крутой компании. Так и живем!!

Да не говори ...ВОРЬЕ сидит у власти  разворовывающая бюджет и все что только можно ... ВСЕ продают за границу , а вырученные деньги под разными проектами разворовываются , причем на столь успешно , что диву даешься где здесь прокуратура и знаменитое кгб...
Читать расследование https://navalny.com/p/4724/

Текст искового заявления — https://docs.google.com/document/d/1k...
Жалоба в прокуратуру — https://docs.google.com/document/d/19...
Жалоба в Администрацию Президента — https://docs.google.com/document/d/1q...

Твиттер Алексея Навального https://twitter.com/navalny
Сайт Фонда борьбы с коррупцией https://fbk.info/
Поддержать Фонд борьбы с коррупией https://donate.fbk.info

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VeIWX3L1Hhk

Putin’s daughter, a young billionaire and the president’s friends
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1kRwkfwZPBQiLuApKcL0isd0C5A4digY0W-cm_rN3Or4/edit
https://docs.google.com/document/d/19x1aRTObzBCY0FI2h_FJ5uNcwQWMT_YCUW4YhDVzEko/edit
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FQ984-2-Wak&feature=youtu.be
http://www.reuters.com/investigates/special-report/russia-capitalism-daughters/#article-the-czarlings
LONDON/MOSCOW – Since Vladimir Putin began cementing his grip on Russia in the 1990s, many of his friends have grown famously rich.
Not so the president himself, say his supporters, who insist Putin is above the money grab that has marked his reign. His public financial disclosures depict a man of modest means. In April, Putin declared an income for 2014 of 7.65 million roubles ($119,000). He listed the ownership of two modest apartments and a share in a car parking garage. 
His daughter Katerina is doing considerably better, supported by some of the Russian president’s wealthy friends, a Reuters examination shows. 
After unconfirmed media speculation about Katerina’s identity, a senior Russian figure told Reuters that she uses the surname Tikhonova. Andrey Akimov, deputy chairman of Russian lender Gazprombank, said he had met Katerina when she was little and more recently, and that Tikhonova was Putin’s daughter.
Reuters has also learned that earlier this year Katerina, 29, described herself as the “spouse” of Kirill Shamalov, son of Nikolai Shamalov, a longtime friend of the president. Shamalov senior is a shareholder in Bank Rossiya, which U.S. officials have described as the personal bank of the Russian elite.
As husband and wife, Kirill and Katerina would have corporate holdings worth about $2 billion, according to estimates provided to Reuters by financial analysts. That wealth stems mainly from a large publicly disclosed stake in a major gas and petrochemical company that Kirill acquired from Gennady Timchenko, another longtime friend of Putin.
Related content https://navalny.com/p/4724/
1.       http://www.reuters.com/investigates/special-report/assets/russia-capitalism-daughters/putin-graphic-related.jpg?v=195615250316

2.       http://www.reuters.com/investigates/special-report/assets/russia-capitalism-daughters/putins-daughters-related.jpg?v=195615250316

3.       http://www.reuters.com/investigates/special-report/assets/russia-capitalism-daughters/I-related.jpg?v=195615250316

Also among the young couple’s holdings is a seaside villa in Biarritz, France, estimated to be worth about $3.7 million. That asset, too, was acquired by Kirill from Timchenko, a commodities trader who has known the president since at least the 1990s.
Katerina is also thriving in academia and running publicly funded projects at Moscow State University. A Reuters examination of public documents shows that the president’s younger daughter has signed contracts worth several million dollars from state-owned organisations for work at the university to be carried out by organisations she directs. There is no indication she has made any personal financial gain from this work.
She holds a senior position at the university, and helps direct a $1.7 billion plan to expand its campus. Katerina’s official advisers at Moscow State University include five members of Putin’s inner circle – including two former KGB officers who knew her when she was a toddler. They served with her father in the 1980s when he was deployed to Dresden, East Germany.
Putin’s elder daughter, Maria, is linked to Moscow State University as well. She is a graduate of the school’s Fundamental Medicine Department and is forging a career in endocrinology, according to publicly available documents.
Katerina, Maria and  Kirill Shamalov all declined to comment for this article. Asked about the Biarritz home, a spokesman for Timchenko said he would not comment on personal matters.
The stock acquisitions, state business deals, French property and oligarch connections offer a rare glimpse into the lives of Putin’s children. The president has been very protective of his private life and his daughters, who seldom appear in the media. The transactions also provide insight into the family finances of Russia’s most powerful man and the elite that has formed around him.
Katerina and Kirill, 33, are among a new generation of Russians enjoying a rapid rise in the wake of their well-connected parents. The phenomenon bears similarities to the “princelings” of China – the children and grandchildren of Communist Party leaders who have gone on to gain positions of power and amass great wealth.
http://www.reuters.com/investigates/special-report/assets/russia-capitalism-daughters/F.jpg?v=195615250316PARTED: Vladimir Putin and Lyudmila, his former wife and mother of his two daughters, pictured in 2011. The couple divorced in 2014. REUTERS/Sergei Karpukhin
“It’s more than just a dynastic succession. Children don’t just inherit their parents’ posts, but also the right to choose any other post they fancy.”
Alexei Navalny, opposition leader
Olga Kryshtanovskaya, a sociologist and former member of Putin’s United Russia political party, told Reuters that a “new aristocracy” was emerging in politics and state companies, with a second generation inheriting the status of the current circle around Putin. “Many in society think they haven't worked for it, and they question who these people really are,” she said.
Among other children of the Putin circle with growing influence are:
Boris Kovalchuk, son of Yuri Kovalchuk, the largest shareholder of Bank Rossiya and a close Putin associate;
Gleb Frank, son of former transport minister Sergei Frank and son-in-law of commodity billionaire Timchenko;
Igor Rotenberg, son of the billionaire Arkady Rotenberg, Putin’s former judo partner;
Sergei S. Ivanov, son of Kremlin Chief of Staff Sergei B. Ivanov.
(
See related story below)
In an interview with Reuters, Alexei Navalny, a Russian opposition leader, described what he called a “neo-feudal system” that threatens to dominate state offices and big business.
“Today in Russia, it is absolutely normal that the boards of directors at state banks are headed by children of security service officials, who aren’t even 30 years old when they are appointed,” he said. “It is more than just a dynastic succession. Children don’t just inherit their parents’ posts, but also the right to choose any other post they fancy.  The danger is that very soon all key resources will end up in the hands of five to seven families.”
Reuters asked the Kremlin whether Katerina Tikhonova was the daughter of Putin and whether she is married to Kirill Shamalov, and other questions. Dmitry Peskov, press secretary of the Russian Federation, replied: “We have no information whatsoever about the personal life, family connection, marital status, academic activities, involvement in particular projects and family tree of Ms Tikhonova, or about other individuals mentioned in your letter.
“In recent years there has been an enormous quantity of gossip on the subject of the family ties of V. Putin, and, in particular, his daughters. The proportion of accurate information in all these publications is laughably small.”
“TALENTED RESEARCHER”
Katerina has largely escaped public attention since her father became president in 2000. In 2011, Putin told Russian television that Katerina had read Oriental studies, specialising in Japanese and history, at St. Petersburg University.
Little else was known about her adult life until a Russian blogger, Oleg Kashin, reported in January that the president’s younger daughter was active at Moscow State University and had taken the surname Tikhonova, derived from the name of her grandmother, Yekaterina Tikhonovna Shkrebneva. 

Комментариев нет:

Отправить комментарий