Tuesday, September 11, 2012
Russian lawmakers move to eject Kremlin critic
By Maria Tsvetkova
MOSCOW (Reuters) - Russian lawmakers said on Monday they had found evidence that a prominent opposition deputy violated curbs on business activity of parliament members, but he denounced their findings as a political reprisal.
Member of the Just Russia political party Gennady Gudkov speaks during an interview in Moscow, May 24, 2012. REUTERS/Sergei Karpukhin |
A ruling by a State Duma committee based on the evidence paved the way for Gennady Gudkov's ejection from the lower parliament house in a vote that may be held a day before protests on Saturday against Russian President Vladimir Putin and the ruling United Russia party.
Gudkov, one of the few deputies in the 450-seat Duma to have taken part in opposition protests last winter that were the biggest of Putin's 12-year rule, says the bid to oust him is politically motivated.
"This is an extrajudicial reprisal. It's a farce," Gudkov said, adding that United Russia lawmakers were rushing to vote him out of the Duma before Saturday, when Putin's opponents want to reignite the street protest movement after a summer lull.
The Duma committee found there was evidence Gudkov engaged in business activities from which he was barred as a member of parliament, accusations Gudkov denies.
"There are materials proving his systematic and regular occupation with business activity," Andrei Vorobyov, head of the United Russia faction in the Duma, said.
"Our faction supports this decision and the decision to vote for ceasing Mr. Gudkov's mandate," he said, adding the vote was likely to be held on Friday.
Though much reduced, the United Russia's 13-seat majority is still enough to vote out Gudkov.
Ejecting Gudkov would strip him of immunity from prosecution. Federal investigators have said there is evidence he conducted illegal business activity, and he could face two years in jail if tried and convicted.
Putin's opponents say the campaign against Gudkov is part of a clampdown on dissent following the longtime leader's election to a six-year presidential term after four years as prime minister.
Putin has signed laws aimed at restricting street protests, punishing slander and branding foreign-funded NGOs as foreign "agents", and protest leader Alexei Navalny has been charged with a financial crime carrying a prison term of up to 10 years.
In an attempt to fight back, Gudkov and his son Dmitry, also a lawmaker from the Just Russia party, have published material suggesting United Russia lawmakers have lucrative business interests.
"I'm not giving up. I will definitely fight," Gennady Gudkov told reporters, adding that he would attend the protest planned on Saturday in Moscow. "Let them arrest me, let them detain me, let them fabricate other cases against me."
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