Russia 091125 Basic Political Developments


FT.com: Control of data slips from Kremlin's grasp



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FT.com: Control of data slips from Kremlin's grasp


http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/8fe2b26e-d962-11de-b2d5-00144feabdc0.html

By Charles Clover in Moscow

Published: November 25 2009 02:00 | Last updated: November 25 2009 02:00

Gorbushka market, just outside central Moscow, does a thriving trade in any electronics good you could want: mobile phones, plasma television sets, the latest DVDs, and, if you ask to see them, software peddlers will show potential clients a list of "databases".

These consist of CDs with names such as "Ministry of Interior - Federal Road Safety Service", "Tax Service" and "Federal Anti Narcotics Service" and cost about $100 apiece.

Each contains confidential information gathered by Russian law enforcement or government agencies: anything from arrest records, personal addresses, passport numbers, phone records or address books to bank account details, known associates, tax data and flight records are on offer.

In some malls these are sold openly, but in Gorbushka, after a recent police sweep, sellers are more discreet; one merchant gives shoppers a list of available titles and offers to burn the disks for 3,000 roubles ($104, €70, £63). He said there was no moral dilemma about selling personal information. "There is a market and we fill it. It's not a question mark for me," he said.

The confidential information is a goldmine for criminals, spies and journalists - but most of all for the police and bureaucrats that sell the information to computer hackers, who mass produce the CDs and sell them openly through vendors in electronics markets or online.

The size of the black market for information is estimated in the tens of millions of dollars and shows a unique side of the Russian state apparatus - one that has painstakingly tried to maintain a monopoly on information but nonetheless is so corrupt that it cannot. Journalists, while nominally the lowest in the pecking order of the semi-authoritarian state, actually have access to more information about the authorities than in perhaps any other country.

"American journalists must be envious of how open we are in Russia," joked Sergei Kanev, an investigative reporter at Novaya Gazeta, an opposition newspaper, who has written articles about the information trade and occasionally uses the databases in his reporting. He says the main users of the information black market are criminals. He has covered cases of blackmail where extortionists used records of reported rapes or prostitution convictions to blackmail women.

Booting up a database of narcotics offenders, Mr Kanev says: "Look here, you have photos, addresses, phone numbers, what kind of drugs they use. It's very common for con artists to take this database, call up a family member and tell them their son or daughter has been arrested for drugs. They pretend to be policemen and for 10,000 roubles they offer to let the kid go. The parents know their kid is a user, they think its true, and so they pay up. It's all a trick."

But the corruption of the state occasionally works to the advantage of those who are working to change it - giving citizens the resources to spy on corrupt authorities, in an odd reversal of roles for a semi-authoritarian state such as Russia. For example, reporters investigating the murder of Novaya Gazeta journalist Anna Politkovskaya in 2006 used a database of flight records known as "Sirena" as the basis to link an officer in the Federal Security Service, who is suspected of being an accomplice, to a hired killer who is serving a 12-year sentence for attempted murder in a separate case and is a relative of two other suspects.

The database allegedly shows the FSB officer, Pavel Ryaguzov, flying to Ingushetia with the convicted hit man, Lom Ali Gaitukayev, and his own boss, an FSB colonel.

The men sat together, and registered for the flight at the same time, suggesting they were travelling together. While the information does not prove anything, it does show an uncomfortably close relationship between the FSB and organised crime. The details of the trip were also backed up by an eyewitness account. Mr Kanev broke this story in February. Mr Ryaguzov was acquitted in a related case by a jury that month, but the acquittal was overturned by the supreme court. A new trial is expected soon.

The black market trade in information is illegal but tolerated in Russia - as long as it stays under the surface. Selling in discreet stalls in shopping malls is tacitly accepted. But one recent effort to set up an online black market database failed - in 2008 the website radarix.com was operational for less than a week - registered to a Panamanian national and hosted on a US server - before being shut down.

Many large corporations maintain their own security departments, all of which use information databases. However, most of the big players have direct relationships to state officials and do not rely on commercial or black market providers of such information, said Sergei Minaev, general director of Special Information Systems, one of Russia's largest legitimate providers of information for commercial purposes.

Mr Minaev and others question the value of much of the information available on the black market. Mr Minaev said that despite appearances, many of the databases were out of date. "Most of it is junk. All these databases you buy on the street are old, and three out of 10 items are wrong." Others have raised the possibility that some of the information is deliberately falsified

He said that the passage of tough laws in 2002 didn't wipe out the trade, but simply sent it underground. "The authorities destroyed the black market without creating a white one," he said. "They created no alternative for people who legitimately need information. They made everything illegal. That is why it's possible to buy anything."

Elena Lukyanova, a law professor at Moscow State University, said that some legislation in Russia, such as a 2004 law requiring political parties to disclose membership lists, violated constitutional protections on information disclosure and privacy.

"This was done to control the opposition," she said. "If there are violations of the constitution like this, at the level of legislation, we should not be surprised that laws get violated and these black market databases are out there."

She said the problem was endemic corruption.

And while it is possible to find many secrets using Russia's information black market, there is still evidently a tight grip on the most sensitive information of all - foreign bank accounts of top officials, their ownership of assets and those of their relatives. Those are not to be found at the Gorbushka market.



Itar-Tass: Over 20,000 Russians make hajj to Saudi Arabia

http://www.itar-tass.com/eng/level2.html?NewsID=14567488&PageNum=0

25.11.2009, 10.03

MOSCOW, November 25 (Itar-Tass) - Over 20,000 Russians are taking part in the culminating phase of the hajj that begins in Saudi Arabia on Wednesday.

On November 26, pilgrims will travel to Mount Arafat and stand in the open praising Allah. After sunset they will leave Arafat and head to nearby Muzdalifah, where they will collect pebbles for the next phase of pilgrimage – the symbolic stoning of the devil represented by three pillars in Mina. On November 27, they will celebrate the festival of sacrifice, thanksgiving, rejoicing and prayer.

“Saudi Arabia’s quota issued to Russia this year has been fully used,” the aide for hajj affairs under government’s commission for religious organizations, Islam Nazaraliyev, told Itar-Tass.

He noted that Saudi Arabia cut this year’s quotas over the outbreak of swine flu. Last year 26,000 Russian pilgrims made the hajj pilgrimage.

Over 2.5 million Muslim believers take part in the hajj, of them 2 million are travelers from another part of the globe.

“This year eight companies were responsible for the organization of the hajj, two – in Moscow, two – in Dagestan, as well as in Tatarstan, Ingushetia, Chechnya and the Coordination Centre of North Caucasus Muslims,” Nazaraliyev said.

Around 80 percent of pilgrims are from the North Caucasus, he said. The number of those who travel to Saudi Arabia by plane increase – 50 percent this year.

Russian pilgrims will begin to return to Russia on December 1.



25.11.09 12:14
Interfax: The court arrested the detainee in Moscow suspected militants of the bandit Umarov

http://www.interfax-russia.ru/South/main.asp?id=57294

/Google translation/
November 25. Interfax-Russia.ru - Lefortovo Court in Moscow issued an arrest warrant for a suspect of involvement in an illegal armed formation, led by Doka Umarov.

"The judge Lefortovo district court ruled, according to which of Ruslan Ozniev suspected of committing a crime under Art. 208 (participation in illegal armed formation) and Art. 222 (illegal possession of firearms and ammunition) of the Criminal Code, to preventive measures in the form detention ", - told Interfax on Wednesday, the spokesperson of the Moscow City Court, Anna Usacheva.

According to investigators, during the search on November 19 in R. Ozniev Makarov pistol was seized from two shops to him, as well as "Moscow map with marks of the possible places a bookmark explosives."

The material indicates that at the end of July 2007 Ozniev R., born in 1983, came from the Republic of Poland in the factory district of Grozny, where, on its own initiative, entered into in violation of the law created by Dmitry Umarov militia.

The detainee is suspected that supported the establishment and activities of form, but also knew about the presence of the participants of firearms.

Investigators believe that being in an illegal armed formation, R. Ozniev to conspiracy took the nickname Abdulmalik and served in various directions managers.

Subsequently, as noted in the materials, hiding from the law enforcement officers, the suspect went to France, where he remained until November 2009. Received this month instructions from one of the leaders of illegal armed groups, said a consequence, R. Ozniev arrived in Moscow to assist participants in forming.

Nov. 18, according to the materials, R. Ozniev met with an unidentified person from whom he received "explosives, tools, initiating explosives, firearms and ammunition, as well as personal disguise - a wig and glasses.

These substances and firearms were seized at the place of residence R. Oznieva November 19 this year, said the investigation.

The court order may be appealed within three days after the announcement in Moscow City Court.

Axisglobe: Isa Yamadayev addressed to Russian President as his hunting reportedly continues in Moscow

http://www.axisglobe.com/article.asp?article=1954

24.11.2009


The conflict between the clan of the Chechen President Ramzan Kadyrov and the authoritative Chechen family of Yamadayevs has been lasting for some years, daily Moskovsky Komsomolets (MK) writes. The paper’s source from the security services commented on the current situation, “Several groups at once have been working regarding Isa Yamadayev, arrival of those people to Moscow from the Chechen Republic has been fixed last week. The New Year is put as deadline of the task to solve the question concerning him. But they will not leave from Moscow until they execute the order”. The definition „several groups” may mean that there is a certain number of persons who jointly have been tracking down the potential victim (Isa Yamadayev) with the aim of his elimination, MK marks. “ To solve the question concerning him” means to eliminate, to kill Yamadayev. Thus, it turns out that Isa Yamadayev should be killed till January 1, 2010. Judging by the chain of liquidations of his brothers, these intentions are more than serious, the daily points out.
Isa Yamadayev visited the editorial office of the MK and confirmed the reports about the chase. He told that the Interior Ministry of Russia had allocated protection to him and he had decided to address to the President of Russia Dmitry Medvedev through mass media on the matter.
The conflict between the two most influential clans in the Chechen Republic ripened for a long time, MK expands. The Yamadayevs were getting increased authority and popularity. The conflict entered its "hot" stage on April 13, 2008. A road accident took place in central Gudermes because of a Kadyrov’s relative who considerably had exceeded speed. Two servicemen of the Russian GRU Chechen battalion Vostok*,commanded by Sulim Yamadayev, died as a result of the accident. On April 14, 2008, the conflict between Yamadayev and Kadyrov inflamed when the two motorcades refused to let pass each other on the Caucasus highway in the area of Gudermes. Two hours later under Ramzan Kadyrov's instruction the battalions Sever, Yug, republican special-task police division, rapid-reaction unit, regiment named after Akhmat-Hadzhi Kadyrov, the so-called oil regiment, special troops of the Ministry of Interior of Chechen Republic, in total of 25,000 servicemen blocked the 500-men strong base of Vostok battalion in Gudermes and ordered the battalion’s servicemen to change their affiliation. They were demanded to go over under Ramzan Kadyrov’s command, that is to voluntary leave the Vostok battalion of the Main Intelligence Directorate of Russian Defence Ministry’s General Staff. On April 15, Kadyrov publicly accused Yamadayev of murders and abductions of peaceful inhabitants. Simultaneously a criminal case was brought for alleged use of violence against the representative of authorities, concerning Badrudi Yamadayev. On April 19, Yamadayev accused Kadyrov of similar crimes. In May, 2008, Sulim Yamadayev was dismissed from command of the battalion. 
(* A special dossier on Chechen security forces is available on AIA website.)

Russian FSB declared anti-terrorist operation in Sunzhensk area of Ingushetia and Achkhoy-Martan district of Chechen republic

http://www.axisglobe.com/article.asp?article=1954

24.11.2009

The counter-terrorist operation regime has taken effect since this morning in Sunzhensk area of Russia's North Caucasus republic of Ingushetia, news agency RIA Novosti reports, referring to the press service of the Federal Security Service (FSB) of the Russian Federation Ingushetia directorate.
A FSB directorate’s spokeman told the agency that they had information that members of illegal armed groups, involved in fulfilment especially grave crimes, could keep in hiding in the specified area.
"The head of the Operative staff in Republic of Ingushetia declared a counter-terrorist operation from 08:00 Moscow time within the framework of the territory limited by settlements of Nesterovskaya, Chemulga, Arshty, Galashki, Alkhasty and administrative border with the Chechen republic,” according to the FSB official. According to the FSB directorate, the zone of counter-terrorist operation is blocked by law enforcement bodies of Ingushetia.
One person was killed in the republic's largest city of Nazran yesterday when unknown assailants opened fire on a vehicle driven by a police officer, RIA Novosti cites Ingush police.
In its turn, the Federal Security Service (FSB) of the Russian Federation directorate in Chechen republic confirmed introduction of counter-terrorist operation regime in Achkhoy-Martan district to news agency RIA Novosti. The security forces believe that a group of insurgents has been hiding in mountain-woody part of the district. The special regime has taken force in a strip located from eastern suburb of Bamut settlement through the river Fortanga in southern and eastern directions, news agency reports.
Attacks on troops, police and other officials have been reported almost daily in Ingushetia and Russia's other North Caucasus republics in recent months.



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