The chief editor was shot

Published: 10 July 2004 y., Saturday
The man who told the world exactly how wealthy Russia's super-rich are and exactly what oligarchs spend their millions on has been shot dead in Moscow in a murder that has all the hallmarks of a contract killing. Pavel Klebnikov, the chief editor of the Russian edition of Forbes magazine, was shot at point- blank range in a suburb of northern Moscow near the city's botanical gardens at around 10pm last night. He died later in an ambulance having taken four bullets in the chest. Klebnikov, 41, a US citizen born in New York, was descended from White Russian émigrés who fled the country when Communists seized power. He had made powerful enemies writing a damning book about Boris Berezovsky, the tycoon who has exiled himself in the UK, and another about a Chechen rebel field commander called Khoj-Akhmed Nukaev. Klebnikov alleged that Mr Berezovsky, with $620m (£330m) to his name, was involved in the criminal underworld and became embroiled in a protracted court case that ended in an out-of-court settlement and an apology from Forbes. Some said that his book about Mr Berezovsky - Godfather of the Kremlin; The Decline of Russia in the Age of Gangster Capitalism - was anti-Semitic in tone and overly critical of the tycoon at the expense of other key characters such as Russia's former president Boris Yeltsin.
Šaltinis: news.independent.co.uk
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

Are minimum incomes the answer to poverty and “working poor”?

The dark spectre of unemployment is stalking Europe and 2010 is the year it has earmarked in the fight against poverty. more »

Ruined Chile is still waiting for help

Just about a month after a devastating 8.8-magnitude earthquake destroyed vast swaths of Chile’s south central region, residents in the coastal town of Dichato continue to wait for much needed aid. more »

Earth Hour: European Parliament to switch off lights

The European Parliament will once again mark “Earth Hour” by switching off lights in all its buildings for one hour this Friday and Saturday. more »

More women in top jobs key to economic growth, says EU report

Only one in 10 board members of Europe's biggest listed companies is a woman and all central bank governors in the EU are male. more »

More legal certainty for cross-border marriages

New rules in 10 EU countries would let international couples choose which country’s law applies to their divorces. more »

EU urged to do more for young people

The EP's Committee on Culture and Education urges the EU to promote non-formal education, combat youth unemployment and help young people with special needs. more »

China still suffering from drought

More than 50 million people in southwest China are struggling to cope with what is being called the worst drought in living memory. more »

More power to consumers

Ideas sought on how to improve train, energy and banking services - a major cause of headaches for consumers in Europe. more »

EBRD helps rehabilitate water system in Kazakhstan

The EBRD is supporting the rehabilitation of the water and wastewater system in the city of Aktau, in the Mangystau region of Kazakhstan, with a loan in Kazakhstan Tenge (KZT) equivalent to €5.8 million (KZT 1.2 billion) to Aktau TVS&V, the municipal water and district heating company serving the city. more »

St. Patrick's Day parade

The world’s biggest St. Patrick’s Day parade bathed New York’s Fifth Avenue in a sea of green. more »