Paul
Goble
Staunton, July 17 – Commentators have
been debating why the Kremlin decided to charge Khabarovsk governor Sergey
Furgal with a crime so that it could remove him from his post. Most suggest
that Putin objected to the presence of a governor from a party other than
United Russia and one who was obviously more popular in his region than the Kremlin
leader.
But as popular protests against that enter
their sixty day, one observer says, the real reason is both simpler and does
even less credit to the Russian president. Furgal was ousted, Sergey Igonin
says, because of a fight over property between him and Putin allies, the
Rotenbergs (echo.msk.ru/blog/echomsk/2677685-echo/).
Until the end of 2019, Furgal and his
allies controlled 50 percent of the Amurstal company, while the Rotenbergs
controlled the other half. Then, Furgal’s
ally was arrested and confined to Moscow’s Lefortovo Prison where Furgal now
finds himself. Under pressure, Furgal’s
ally has agreed to testify against Furgal. Thus, the company will pass to Putin’s
friends.
In fact, the Rotenbergs gained effective
control after Furgal’s ally was arrested, and they immediately began laying off
workers so as to improve their profits.
Furgal resisted their efforts but could not block them because he had
become a minority shareholder. Nonetheless, his resistance added to his
popularity.
“Everything in this world and in our country
occurs because of money,” Ignonin says. “And in Khabarovsk Kray, everything is
linked to the Amurstal factory.” That and not some broader political agenda is
what is behind the recent events, although “no one expected that people would
go into the streets.”
That has called attention to this dirty
game about which he provides dates, names and profits, Ignonin says, even
though many prefer to ignore that and speculate about the supposedly high
politics involved.
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