Grigory Yavlinsky has called on acting President
Vladimir Putin to make his position clear on the situation
involving Pavel Borodin, a former top Kremlin official
who is wanted in Switzerland on charges of money laundering.
Putin "must finally and clearly indicate his
position regarding high-ranking officials accused
of corruption," Yabloko's Yavlinsky said Sunday
night, Interfax reported.
Putin has made no public statement about Borodin.
In January, Putin in effect distanced himself from
Borodin by removing him from his post as the Kremlin's
chief property manager and giving him the less important
job as secretary of the Russia-Belarus union.
The fact that Putin has not reacted to the scandal
is seen by some analysts as a sign of unwillingness
to antagonize important political factions before
the March 26 presidential elections.
Putin "does not need conflicts with Russia's
political elite, including the old Kremlin group,
on the eve of the election," said political analyst
Andrei Ryabov of the Moscow Carnegie Center.
Putin's first job in the Kremlin, after moving to
Moscow from the St. Petersburg city administration,
was as one of Borodin's deputies.
Segodnya reported Monday that the Swiss authorities
had planned a secret operation to arrest Borodin but
that it was foiled by disclosure of the arrest order
in the media last week.
Swiss officials quietly circulated the arrest order
through Interpol in the hope of luring Borodin to
Western Europe and having him arrested there, the
report said. Under Russia's Constitution, he cannot
be extradited.
Segodnya said Switzerland planned an operation similar
to that which led to the arrest of former Ukrainian
Prime Minister Pavel Lazarenko on the Swiss border
last year. Borodin has denied wrongdoing and said
he is ready to go to Switzerland for questioning.
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