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Russia opens fraud probe into MP who opposed Crimea annexation

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Russia has opened a criminal probe into the only lawmaker who voted against Moscow's annexation of Crimea, accusing him of embezzlement, authorities announced Tuesday.

The Investigative Committee, which reports directly to President Vladimir Putin, accused MP Ilya Ponomaryov of complicity in embezzling 22 million rubles ($394,000, 351,000 euros) from the Skolkovo Foundation, a high-tech project that the Kremlin hoped would be its answer to Silicon Valley.

Investigators said the lawmaker had misappropriated fees for lectures, which only lasted "3 to 18 minutes", receiving some $30,000 for each lecture.

Ponomaryov, who remains a sitting lawmaker, currently lives in the United States. He says he has come under pressure from the authorities and chose not to return from a business trip last August.

The 39-year-old lawmaker has denied any wrongdoing.

The Russian parliament's lower house, the State Duma, in April voted to lift the lawmaker's immunity from prosecution.

Investigators added that they would seek Ponomaryov's extradition.

Ponomaryov is one of the few remaining lawmakers who are openly critical of Putin. He was the only MP who voted against the ratification of a treaty incorporating the Ukrainian peninsula of Crimea into Russia last year.

"Looking from the outside, it's clear the main thing that the authorities have stolen from Russia is the future," he wrote earlier this year.

Russia has opened a criminal probe into the only lawmaker who voted against Moscow’s annexation of Crimea, accusing him of embezzlement, authorities announced Tuesday.

The Investigative Committee, which reports directly to President Vladimir Putin, accused MP Ilya Ponomaryov of complicity in embezzling 22 million rubles ($394,000, 351,000 euros) from the Skolkovo Foundation, a high-tech project that the Kremlin hoped would be its answer to Silicon Valley.

Investigators said the lawmaker had misappropriated fees for lectures, which only lasted “3 to 18 minutes”, receiving some $30,000 for each lecture.

Ponomaryov, who remains a sitting lawmaker, currently lives in the United States. He says he has come under pressure from the authorities and chose not to return from a business trip last August.

The 39-year-old lawmaker has denied any wrongdoing.

The Russian parliament’s lower house, the State Duma, in April voted to lift the lawmaker’s immunity from prosecution.

Investigators added that they would seek Ponomaryov’s extradition.

Ponomaryov is one of the few remaining lawmakers who are openly critical of Putin. He was the only MP who voted against the ratification of a treaty incorporating the Ukrainian peninsula of Crimea into Russia last year.

“Looking from the outside, it’s clear the main thing that the authorities have stolen from Russia is the future,” he wrote earlier this year.

AFP
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