They won’t really tackle corruption. No one in Russia believes the authorities go after people close to United Russia and the government. Its that old maxim: Punish your enemies and reward your friends. A game Putin has played expertly for over a decade now.
It seems to be true, but I find it ironic that crook is an MP as a Liberal Democrat there. Looks like a libs are all the same everythere.
On a pleasant spring night in May, 2004, groups of protesters stormed the presidents residence in Batumi, demanding Mr. Abashidzes resignation. There were many factors that led to his ouster, among them the suspicion that he had raided the Adjara budget and secreted huge amounts of cash including personal letters from Iranian officials regarding the uranium deal out of the country. When his secretary protested in those last desperate hours, saying there was no time to gather all his correspondence, Mr. Abashidze replied that he only needed the letters written in Farsi. She complied, according to witnesses, and it took more than an hour to gather all the private paperwork. A plane was sent from Moscow to pick him up. He took his bodyguards, and his son and the incriminating evidence of the Iranian deal. He is now living in Moscow in luxury, (with a fake passport, indeed he is afraid to travel) a billionaire protected by the even more corrupt Moscow Mayor Yuri Lushkov, a close ally, who despises America. Nevertheless, Mr. Abashidze just purchased a home in Vienna for $5 million, where his son a well known drug dealer and playboy resides.
The mystery of how Iran got the chemicals to enrich the uranium lies with Mr. Abashidze, a little-known figure now protected by his powerful friends in Moscow. He is under investigation for murder and money laundering, but so far international authorities have little hard evidence of his involvement with Irans nuclear program.... ---- Shadowy nuclear trail, The Washington Times ^ | 3-29-06 | Tsotne Bakuria