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Kremlin knows detained US businessman as major investor in Russia Moscow knows top Baring Vostok businessman as major investor in Russia, alarmed by his arrest
(about 4 hours later)
The arrest of the founder and senior partner of Baring Vostok private equity fund, Michael Calvey, won’t harm the confidence of foreign investors in Russia, according to Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov. Moscow is “closely following” the news about US businessman Michael Calvey’s arrest, the Kremlin said, adding that the case is not political and has nothing to do with Moscow’s strained relations with Washington.
Calvey is “really a very big investor in the Russian economy,” Peskov said, stressing that the Kremlin is “closely watching” the case. The Russian authorities know Calvey as a “major investor…who always championed an idea of a high investment potential of the Russian market,” the Russian President Vladimir Putin’s spokesman Dmitry Peskov said, following the businessman’s arrest.
According to the latest ruling by a Moscow district court, Calvey, a US citizen, was detained for two months after his bail of five million rubles (US$75.5 thousand) was denied. The businessman was taken into custody on Friday along with several other suspects, including partners of the Baring Vostok fund. Calvey is suspected of embezzling 2.5 billion rubles ($37.5 million) from Vostochny Bank via a fraudulent scheme. Calvey, a US citizen, who is the founder and senior partner of Baring Vostok private equity fund, was detained alongside several other suspects last Friday on suspicion of embezzling 2.5 billion rubles (US$37.5 million) from Vostochny Bank via a fraudulent scheme. He was ordered to remain in custody for at least two months by a Moscow district court after his bail of five million rubles was denied.
The Kremlin spokesman added that current political tensions between Moscow and Washington cannot be considered as a factor in the case. Moscow “is closely following the developments” in this case and hopes that “it cannot and will not affect Russia’s investment climate in any way.” He also denied that Calvey’s case has any links to Russian politics and particularly to the strained relations between Moscow and Washington.
According to the investigators, Calvey and his associates persuaded the board of Vostochny Bank to accept a package of shares of an enterprise instead of paying off a debt. While the shares were said to be worth over three billion rubles, their real cost was merely 600,000 rubles. “Russia’s relations with other countries have never had any influence on the business activities of foreign investors here,” and Russia is and will always be interested in providing comfortable conditions for international investors, he added.
Russia’s business ombudsmen, Boris Titov, stood up for the arrested investor, saying that the case shouldn’t have come under criminal jurisdiction with the allegations looking dubious. When asked about the Russian president’s potential response to the businessman’s arrest, Peskov tried to distance Putin from it saying it has nothing to do with the Russian president. “It is the court that will determine his guilt.”
“The decision to keep Calvey behind bars is surely illegal,” Titov wrote in a commentary for the Russian business daily Vedomosti. “The Baring Vostok situation has rocked the business community.” Meanwhile, Russia’s business ombudsman, Boris Titov, criticized the US investor’s arrest and said that the whole case might in fact amount to a corporate dispute and not embezzlement.
“From the open sources, I can see that it is about flawed stock’s valuation and it is obviously an economic dispute,” he wrote in a commentary for the Russian business daily Vedomosti.
Titov also maintained that the case should be resolved through a court of arbitrage and “has nothing to do with the criminal law.” Calvey should not remain in custody during the investigation but should instead be released on bail or put under house arrest. Earlier, Putin also suggested applying such measures to all entrepreneurs investigated in Russia.
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