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Politics : Israel to U.S. : Now Deal with Syria and Iran -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Ed Huang who wrote (7040)2/9/2005 10:58:04 AM
From: Emile Vidrine  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 22250
 
The Russian people stand up against the Jewish/Zionist yoke...

As Russian Jews react to letter,TV program heightens the crisis,

by Lev Krichevsky, Jewish Telegraphic Agency, February 8, 2005
"Russian Jews are calling for action after 20 politicians signed a letter to the country’s prosecutor general asking him to ban Jewish organizations in the country as extremist. The leadership of the Euro-Asian Jewish Congress, along with the European Jewish Congress and the Conference of European Rabbis, will raise the issue with members of the European Parliament, said Mikhail Chlenov, the Euro-Asian group’s secretary-general. Jewish groups may ask European legislators to blacklist the Russian lawmakers who signed the anti-Semitic letter. Russian Jewish groups also may file a lawsuit against the lawmakers who signed the letter, which was condemned in a vote in the Russian Parliament late last week. The steps being taken by Russian Jewish groups come as officials and individuals in the community consider how to react to what appears to be a revival of anti-Semitism, as exemplified by the letter and by public reaction to a televised debate that involved one of Russia’s leading anti-Semites. More than half of the viewers who called the NTV channel Feb. 3 during a prime-time debate on one of the country’s most popular talk shows supported the Communist lawmaker Albert Makashov over former Soviet cosmonaut Alexei Leonov. Makashov, a retired army general with a history of making anti-Semitic statements, was among the lawmakers who signed the letter that generated headlines in Russia and around the world late last month. Leonov, the first man to walk in outer space in 1965 and the commander of the Soyuz spaceship crew in 1975 during the joint Apollo-Soyuz flight, is not Jewish but was picked by TV producers to challenge Makashov over his anti-Semitism. Throughout the broadcast, Makashov made anti-Semitic statements against Jewish oligarchs who, he claimed, had robbed Russia of its wealth and exert complete control over its economy. On air, the president of the Russian Jewish Congress accused Makashov of violating Russian legislation that makes hate speech a criminal offense. The judges on the “K Baryeru” program — a popular TV host, an actress, a poet and former NHL hockey player Sergei Makarov — gave the nod to Leonov, who spoke against anti-Semitism and xenophobia. But the audience thought differently: Over 53,000 of some 100,000 call-in votes went to Makashov, whom the viewers found more convincing than Leonov. The results of the vote gave many Russian Jews the shivers. Vladimir Solovyev, the show’s host and himself a Jew, said support for Makashov could mean that for Russia the year now is “1904, the eve of Jewish pogroms of 1905, or it is Germany of 1932?” Semyon Belenkiy, 68, a pensioner, said immediately after the broadcast that the international community should unite around the goal of saving Russian Jews and should help “every single Jew emigrate from this anti-Semitic country.” One Russian Jewish journalist called on President Vladimir Putin to break his silence about the show. “This show is a signal to the Jews, including those who had never thought about leaving their native country. It’s time to take our kids out of here,” Tankred Golenpolsky, founder of the International Jewish Gazette, Russia’s oldest Jewish periodical, wrote to Putin in a letter circulated Tuesday. But some Jewish leaders were less prone to panic, at least publicly. “That vote has nothing to do with the real situation in the society,” said Boruch Gorin, spokesman for the Federation of Jewish Communities, the country’s largest Jewish umbrella organization, adding that the vote was anecdotal, not scientific. “The problem was the show itself. What it demonstrated was a total lack of understanding of the topic it raised, and of the people. To choose this topic for a show was a strategic mistake” by the producers, Gorin said. Meanwhile, to the dismay of Jewish observers, the resolution against the anti-Semitic letter, which passed the Duma by a vote of 306-58, did not mention any of the legislators who signed the letter. The declaration said it’s “particularly sorrowful” that the letter came as the world mourned the victims of Auschwitz in late January. While the letter’s authors later withdrew their request, “the simple fact of such appeals cannot fail to concern us,” the declaration said. Some Jewish leaders said they were not happy with the Duma declaration. They believe it resulted from pressure from the Kremlin, which wanted to distance itself from possible accusations of anti-Semitism coming from members of Parliament. “This was an attempt to put out a fire, and I cannot say a successful attempt,” Gorin said. Gorin said his group — in partnership with its longtime rival, the Russian Jewish Congress — may soon launch a special community task force to better respond to situations like this one." [JTR editor's note: The Russian Jewish Congress is more corrupt (if that's possible) than its Western counterparts. Vladimir Gusinsky -- currently a criminal fugitive from Russia -- once headed that Jewish lobbying organization. Jewish domination of the "Russian mafia," here and here.]



To: Ed Huang who wrote (7040)2/9/2005 11:43:43 AM
From: Elmer Flugum  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 22250
 
Yukos owner sues Russia for $28bn

The main owner of Yukos, Menatep, said it served a damages claim of $28.3 billion against the Russian government on Wednesday for expropriating its investment in the stricken oil company.

Tim Osborne, Menatep's managing director, told Reuters the claim rested on the allegation that Russia reneged on its duties under the Energy Charter, an international treaty designed to enforce international law in energy investments.

"We served a notice of arbitration on the Russian Federation ... That number (of $28.3 billion) will get more precise as we go through the forensic accounting exercises to calculate the loss of profits," said Osborne.

"At the moment, that figure is the loss of share value from its (Yukos stock) peak to today plus an estimate of what we think the share price would have been had the Russian government not interfered."

A Menatep statement said the claims would be handled through the arbitration rules of the United Nations Commission on International Trade Law.

Officials at the Russian government declined to comment.

The move marks further internationalization of the Yukos affair, which has already damaged investor confidence, triggering billions of dollars of capital flight and raising serious questions about the rule of law in Russia.

"The claim will be an additional reason for international investors to remain cautious about Russia," Alfa Bank said.

Jamie Firestone, a lawyer with U.S. law firm Firestone Duncan, which is not involved in the case, said there could be years of litigation: "Global litigation is going to go on and on and on."

Menatep alleges that Yukos was worth $17 billion in October 2003, just before the arrest of Mikhail Khodorkovsky, who founded Yukos and Menatep, for fraud and tax evasion.

Yukos has been crushed by a $27.5 billion tax claim by the state, while Khodorkovsky is on trial, facing 10 years in jail if convicted in what he claims is a politically motivated case.

The firm's main oil production unit, Yuganskneftegaz, was returned to state ownership in a forced sale in December and is now controlled by state oil firm Rosneft.

The auction of Yugansk was the climax of a Kremlin campaign to destroy the politically ambitious Khodorkovsky and regain control over the energy sector, which it lost in the 1990s asset sales.

In addition to:

Message 21024705

"Mr. Brudno and Mr. Dubov were investors in his investment company, Group Menatep. Russia's general prosecutor charged Mr. Brudno last year with misappropriation of property and Mr. Dubov with fraud, and placed them both on an Interpol wanted list. It is unclear how binding the list is among member countries.

The two fled to Israel last year and obtained Israeli citizenship."

Just like that!

len



To: Ed Huang who wrote (7040)2/9/2005 1:52:55 PM
From: Yaacov  Respond to of 22250
 
No Ed we call this thread Jewchin. Ha Ha Ha.