MOSCOW, Oct 27 (Reuters) - Russian financial markets slumped
on Monday
after the arrest of Russia's richest man, a move that raises doubts, for
some, over President Vladimir Putin's commitment to radically reform the
ex-Soviet state.
Saturday's arrest at gunpoint of oil magnate Mikhail Khodorkovsky risks
undoing Putin's efforts during three years in power to drag up the sagging
economy and create a strong political system into which investors would
happily pour money.
Khodorkovsky, 40, head of oil giant YUKOS, was snatched from a plane
in
Siberia, charged with fraud and tax evasion and put in a Moscow jail
pending further investigation.
"The arrest, indictment and imprisonment of Mikhail Khodorkovsky...is
a
disgraceful setback in Russia's post-Soviet development," United
Financial
Group brokerage said.
"Everyone is a loser...including President Putin himself."
Putin, in his first public comment on an affair that has triggered uproar
in the political and business community, appealed for calm and refused
to
negotiate over the arrest.
"There will be no meetings and no bargaining over the activities
of the law
enforcement agencies as long as, of course, these agencies are acting
within the framework of Russian law," he told members of government,
saying
the issue was entirely in the hands of the courts.
Russian shares fell more than 10 percent on the arrest. Those of YUKOS
lost
a fifth of their value.
The rouble dropped as banks rushed for U.S. currency on fears that the
arrest would send money flooding out of Russia.
How long the damage lasts depends on "how successfully Putin extricates
himself from the dangerous political trap which he has carelessly fallen
into," United Financial Group said.
PUTIN WARNS AGAINST HYSTERIA
Putin called for an end to "speculation and hysteria" over
any roll-back of
the privatisation of the early 1990s which put much of the old Soviet
state
wealth into the hands of a few businessmen, or "oligarchs" as
they came to
be known.
Those privatisations helped propel Khodorkovsky to a fortune recently
estimated by Forbes at $8 billion, making him the 26th richest man on
the
planet.
While the arrest has infuriated investors and Russia's liberals, it
may
even raise Putin's standing among the bulk of the electorate which views
oligarchs largely as robbers of state assets who left them worse off than
under the Soviet system.
"I am a pensioner, so by default I can't be on Khodorkovsky's side.
He...is
a thief," said Zoya Andreyevna, in her early 70s. "I trust Putin.
His eyes
are so kind. He is a kind man, he understands us pensioners."
The issue has been bubbling near the political surface since the summer
when a Khodorkovsky associate was arrested in what many saw as a warning
shot by the Kremlin to tell the tycoon to keep his nose out of politics.
Khodorkovsky backs two minor political parties but many analysts believe
he
has higher ambitions which are seen as a threat by some in the Kremlin
establishment.
His arrest is at an especially sensitive time with parliamentary elections
in early December and Putin's almost certain attempt at reelection next
March.
"It's clear that a political show trial is being prepared,"
Gleb Pavlovsky,
a political image-maker credited with helping Putin's rise to power, told
Izvestia. "This is a Stalin phenomenon."
The jailing of the high-profile businessman has come just as Russia
has
begun to rise in the eyes of the international financial community. Earlier
this month it was handed a crucial investment grade by one major ratings
agency.
"If the upgrade re-emphasised Russia's much-improved financial
situation,
Khodorkovsky's arrest serves as an unwelcome reminder of Russia's high
country risk and questionable legal system," Aton Capital brokerage
said.
Khodorkovsky's lawyer, Anton Drel, told Reuters he had not been allowed
to
speak to his client who is in Moscow's Matrosskaya Tishina (Sailor's Rest)
jail.
Deputy Justice Minister Yuri Kalinin said the oil tycoon had not been
given
any special privileges.
"Khodorkovsky is in a five-man cell. We have received no complaints
or
statements from him," Interfax quoted him as saying.
Khodorkovsky heads Russia's biggest oil company, YukosSibneft, created
by a
merger now under way of YUKOS with smaller rival Sibneft.
U.S. oil majors Exxon Mobil and Chevron Texaco are thought to be interested
in purchasing a stake in it but market analysts said talks on that would
almost certainly now have to wait.
(Additional reporting by Maria Golovnina, Larisa Sayenko, Andrius Vilkancas
and Dmitry Zhdannikov)
See also:
YUKOS
case
|