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MOSCOW, Oct. 25 (Xinhuanet) -- A Moscow
court has sanctioned the arrest of Mikhail Khodorkovsky, the chief of Russia's
largest oil producer Yukos after he was charged with large-scale fraud, tax
evasion and other offenses, Interfax reported Saturday.
Khodorkovsky, Russia's richest man, was detained Saturday morning by the
FSB agents at the airport of Russia's Siberian city of Novosibirsk, where his
plane landed to refuel en route from Nizhny Novgorod to Irkutsk.
Prosecutors said Khodorkovsky was detained because he had failed to come
for questioning.
He was then brought to the Prosecutor General's Office in Moscow and
questioned.
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 File Photo: Mikhail
Khodorkovsky (R)
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filed charges against Khodorkovsky under seven articles of the Criminal Code and
asked for court permission to take Khodorkovsky into custody.
Prosecutors accuse Khodorkovsky and his banker Platon Lebedev of causing
damage of more than 1 billion US dollars and claim thatthe Russian state is one
of the alleged victims.
"The damage caused by Khodorkovsky and Platon Lebedev, including their
damage to national interests, is estimated by the investigators at more than 1
billion US dollars," the Interfax quoted a spokesman at Russia's Prosecutor
General's Office as saying.
Yukos, however, condemned the arrest as an "obviously political motivation"
and said it "will not seriously affect" its business.
Yukos considers "the brutal coercion used against the head of one of the
largest oil companies of the world a humiliation for the entire Russian law
enforcement system," said a statement issued by the company.
The company also vowed to "strictly fulfill its obligations to investors
and creditors."
Judicial campaign against Yukos began in July when its core company
shareholder Platon Lebedev was arrested on charges of theft of state property in
a 1994 privatization deal. The accusations have since mounted to include charges
of murder, attempted murder and tax evasion.
Another Yukos shareholder, Vasily Shakhnovsky, was charged withtax evasion
last week, and prosecutors have said they expect to bring charges against other
senior Yukos managers soon.
Khodorkovsky, who was questioned by prosecutors two days after Lebedev's
detention, has repeatedly described the campaign againsthis company as
politically-motivated, and vowed not to flee Russiainto exile.
Top Russian businessmen and politicians have expressed deep concern over
the developments around Yukos.
Gennady Zyuganov, Russian Communist Party leader, said he was "extremely
worried" over Khodorkovsky's arrest.
Yabloko and the Union of Right Forces, Russia's two key liberalparties,
said that the arrest of Khodorkovsky was worsening the political situation in
the country and "calls into question the immutability of the Russian
constitution."
"Russian business believes that the law enforcement system and its leaders
have worsened the situation in society and undermined entrepreneurs' trust in
them," Russia's Unified Energy Systems head Anatoly Chubais said.
Under these circumstances, numerous companies are modifying their business
strategies and changing investment decisions that are of key importance to
Russia, he said.
"Only Russian President Vladimir Putin's clear and unambiguous position can
stop these developments," he emphasized. Enditem
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