Russian Oligarchs' Penchant for Accidents, Suicide
Russian Oligarchs' Penchant for Accidents, Suicide
"When people die suddenly in Russia, you usually assume it's suspicious until you rule it out.""It becomes a lot more suspicious when all those people die in strange ways and all are connected in some way to the oil and gas business.""Putin is behind all of them, because he is the ultimate beneficiary. He is like the mafia boss."Bill Browder, former foreign investor in Russia"It could be security forces muscling into the energy sector. [But] these are guesses.""We are just making guesses about a situation that is by definition opaque.""Strange things happen. History is not required to make sense."Seva Gunitsky, political science professor, University of Toronto
There
is nothing particularly new about political assassinations in Russia.
They happen with regularity; critics of the regime, its president,
suffer the consequences. Which doesn't stop the outrage of principled
people from breaking out of their cocoon of self-preservation from time
to time, succumbing to their outrage in however a brief period of
relieving themselves of the massive irritation they feel over the
Kremlin's political machinations in league with their president's
ambitions.
From
the time of the February invasion of Ukraine bizarre deaths of
prominent, wealthy, sometimes influential businessmen have occurred.
Mysterious deaths that on occasion also lethally victimize members of
their families. Mysterious mostly because the reason for these deaths
remains unknown. And those responsible are not about to enlighten the
puzzled onlookers who may themselves be the next victims.
From
mere days leading up to the invasion of Ukraine to the present time, a
line of up to eleven oligarchs and business executives, most with links
to Russia's largest corporations, and mostly involved with energy, have
been dispatched in accidents, suicides, murder-suicides and
suddenly-fatal health issues. One prominent Russian fell overboard from a
speeding boat in the Sea of Japan, just this past Saturday.
And
just before that occurred, the vice-president of Lukoil energy giant
lost his balance and fell from a window of a hospital where he was being
treated for an undisclosed malady. The series of strange fatalities has
aroused visions of a widespread menace despite Russia being a country
where assassinations are not uncommon.
Bill
Browder considers most of those deaths were simply murder scenes,
orchestrated by business rivals for greater assets from figures in the
energy industry, awash with wealth despite Western sanctions. He
believes these deaths were planned by the FSB the main
security-intelligence service of the country, and the trail points
directly to Vladimir Putin extracting his cut of resulting proceeds.
Not to be overlooked is that some of the dead had been incautious enough to speak their opposition of the war. "Let's
not forget that Putin does mix money and politics and I think he goes
after his enemies in both cases with equal amounts of cruelty and
potentially violence", said Marcus Kolga, a fellow of the Macdonald-Laurier Institute think-tank.
President
Putin lost no time making any measure of opposition to his invasion of
Ukraine a proposition of risk for anyone criticizing the "special
military operation" that has destroyed towns and villages, laid waste to
inner cities, killed thousands of Russian and Ukrainian servicemen and
many more thousands of innocent Ukrainian civilians.
Something
as offensive as calling the 'special military operation' a war,
referring to the brutality involved, or any other type of comment, can
net the offender up to 15 years in prison. It's possible that as an
alternative of the irreversible state of death, some of those marked out
for death would far have preferred the option of 15 years imprisonment,
but they had no choice in the matter.
Photo by Evgenii Bugubaev/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images |
Labels: Accidents of Assassinations? Russia, Defenestration, Drowning, Energy Corporate Heads, Poisonings, Suicides
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