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Vatic Note: I found it interesting that Britain has become the haven for other countries elite mafia criminals. I suppose it matches the royalty of Britain, with the Queen and her blatantly racist husband and his handling of their financial affairs without true oversite by the peoples elected reps.
Its amazing what these British royalty get away with on a regular basis and the people turn a blind eye because she is the German Queen ruling a British colony of Germany. khazar controlled no less. I keep thinking about how both her and her royal consort, Phillip, killed native American children in Canada and got away with it, when they were the last ones to be with these children. Their dead bodies were found buried on the school grounds years later. Nothing was done about it.
These royals, are truly Pond Scum for doing to those children what they did and ended their short lives before they had a chance to grow and live their lives. But then the Canadian gov is fully ruled by the racist khazar Queen and thus reflects her abomination in all things human. This is exactly why we should fight to the death any attempt by them to bring us back into their commonwealth empire. As for this ex banker, I will wait and see.
Ex-Banker of Moscow (A Rothschild Bank) Chief Gets Asylum in Britain
http://en.ria.ru/russia/20130301/179750701.html
by Admin, RiaNovosti, Russia
14:34 01/03/2013
- Former Bank of Moscow president Borodin suspected of illegal share sale
- Bank of Moscow ex-president Borodin sues bank for 140 mln rbls
- Russian court suspends Borodin from Bank of Moscow president's post
- Borodin sells Bank of Moscow stake at knock-down price - Vedomosti
- Bank of Moscow head Borodin not seeking political asylum in Britain
- Borodin resumes Bank of Moscow management from London office
MOSCOW, March 1 (RIA Novosti) - Self-exiled former Bank of Moscow chief executive Andrei Borodin has been granted political asylum in Britain, his lawyer said on Friday.
“Yes, he got political asylum in Britain. This status is not time-limited,” Borodin’s lawyer in Russia Dmitry Kharitonov told RAPSI legal new agency, confirming Friday media reports.
In an interview with Vedomosti business daily published on Friday, Borodin said that in his appeal for asylum he maintained the criminal case against him in Russia was politically motivated.
The British authorities could not be immediately reached for comment.
Moscow will seek Borodin’s extradition regardless of his status in the UK, the Russian Interior Ministry said on Friday.
“Russian law enforcement agencies will continue to demand Borodin’s extradition, as he has been charged in absentia with fraud and is on an international wanted list,” the Ministry said.
Russian investigators launched a criminal case against Borodin and his former first deputy Dmitry Akulinin in late 2010 on charges of large-scale fraud involving state funds at Bank of Moscow, which functioned as the capital's chief investment vehicle under former Moscow Mayor Yury Luzhkov.
The bankers have been charged in absentia with improperly loaning $443 million to shell companies which then transferred the cash to Yelena Baturina, Luzhkov's wife and the owner of construction empire Inteco.
Borodin fled to Britain in April 2011 after Luzhkov was fired by then-President Dmitry Medvedev in September 2010. Initially, he denied asking for asylum and said he was visiting the UK for medical treatment.
State-owned lender VTB took control of Bank of Moscow - then Russia's fifth-largest - in April 2011. Bank of Moscow had to be bailed out to the tune of $14 billion in July that year, in the biggest rescue of a financial institution in Russian history.
A film shown by Russia's state-owned NTV channel last year, "Anatomy of a Protest," claimed Borodin had helped fund opposition protests, but did not provide any evidence for the claim. Borodin later denied ever having met any of the figures in the protest movement mentioned in the film.
Borodin ranked 117th in the Forbes-2012 List of Russia’s wealthiest people with an estimated fortune of $800 million. In August 2012, he spent $219 million on an estate home in Henley-on-Thames, which was at the time the most expensive home in Britain, the Sunday Times reported.
Britain has become the adopted home of a series of Russian businessmen who have fled their homeland fearing arrest, including tycoon Boris Berezovsky and Yevroset company founder Yevgeny Chichvarkin.
(Updated to include 11th paragraph about NTV film claim)
“Yes, he got political asylum in Britain. This status is not time-limited,” Borodin’s lawyer in Russia Dmitry Kharitonov told RAPSI legal new agency, confirming Friday media reports.
In an interview with Vedomosti business daily published on Friday, Borodin said that in his appeal for asylum he maintained the criminal case against him in Russia was politically motivated.
The British authorities could not be immediately reached for comment.
Moscow will seek Borodin’s extradition regardless of his status in the UK, the Russian Interior Ministry said on Friday.
“Russian law enforcement agencies will continue to demand Borodin’s extradition, as he has been charged in absentia with fraud and is on an international wanted list,” the Ministry said.
Russian investigators launched a criminal case against Borodin and his former first deputy Dmitry Akulinin in late 2010 on charges of large-scale fraud involving state funds at Bank of Moscow, which functioned as the capital's chief investment vehicle under former Moscow Mayor Yury Luzhkov.
The bankers have been charged in absentia with improperly loaning $443 million to shell companies which then transferred the cash to Yelena Baturina, Luzhkov's wife and the owner of construction empire Inteco.
Borodin fled to Britain in April 2011 after Luzhkov was fired by then-President Dmitry Medvedev in September 2010. Initially, he denied asking for asylum and said he was visiting the UK for medical treatment.
State-owned lender VTB took control of Bank of Moscow - then Russia's fifth-largest - in April 2011. Bank of Moscow had to be bailed out to the tune of $14 billion in July that year, in the biggest rescue of a financial institution in Russian history.
A film shown by Russia's state-owned NTV channel last year, "Anatomy of a Protest," claimed Borodin had helped fund opposition protests, but did not provide any evidence for the claim. Borodin later denied ever having met any of the figures in the protest movement mentioned in the film.
Borodin ranked 117th in the Forbes-2012 List of Russia’s wealthiest people with an estimated fortune of $800 million. In August 2012, he spent $219 million on an estate home in Henley-on-Thames, which was at the time the most expensive home in Britain, the Sunday Times reported.
Britain has become the adopted home of a series of Russian businessmen who have fled their homeland fearing arrest, including tycoon Boris Berezovsky and Yevroset company founder Yevgeny Chichvarkin.
(Updated to include 11th paragraph about NTV film claim)
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