Lutsenko commented that he too had come to make a contribution to Russia by bringing with him some 100 volumes of evidence of Bakay’s wrongdoings, but conceded that he stood little chance of success. “If this is the Russian decision, then we can do little to change it” he stated.
Ihor Bakay, the head of former Ukrainian President Leonid Kuchma’s property management office, resigned as the head of Naftohaz Ukrayina, the state energy monopoly, in 2001. Lutsenko said that among the charges against Bakay was defrauding the state in gas-purchase deals with Russia’s Gazprom and Turkmenistan. Lutsenko also stated at the press conference that Kuchma had “fronted for Bakay and covered up his activities.”
Responding to the Bakay affair, Kuchma was quoted by the website of "Ukrayinska pravda" as saying that “Bakay is a talented manager, but he does not know when to step on the brakes.”
Putin Reportedly Upset By Gas Probe
The investigation into allegedly fraudulent practices in the transport of Turkmen gas to Ukraine by two companies, Eural Trans Gas and RosUkrEnergo, that was begun by the Ukrainian Security Service (SBU) in May, was halted by President Viktor Yushchenko’s direct order, former SBU head Oleksandr Turchynov told RFE/RL on 20 September.
Turchynov stated that Yushchenko told him in mid-August to stop “persecuting my men” and that the investigation of RosUkrEnergo was “creating a conflict with Russian President Vladimir Putin.” Turchynov would not elaborate on why Putin was so upset by the investigation.
Soon after Turchynov’s removal as head of the SBU on 8 September, the website Obozrevatel reported on 21 September that the SBU officer in charge of the investigation of RosUkrEnergo, Ondriy Kozhemyakin, was transferred from the case to other duties. Turchynov confirmed this information for RFE/RL.
According to Turchynov, Yuriy Boyko, the former head of Naftohaz, was interrogated twice by the SBU in conjunction with the RosUkrEnergo case and was about to be arrested when Yushchenko ordered Turchynov to let him go. Soon afterward, Boyko, now the head of the Republican Party, signed a preparliamentary election pact with former Prime Minister Anatoliy Kinakh’s party, which supports the pro-Yushchenko faction.
Turchynov told RFE/RL that during the second interrogation of Boyko, investigators confronted him with evidence that he had received kickbacks from the RosUkrEnergo scheme.
As to the activities of Oleksandr Tretyakov, Yushchenko's former top adviser, Turchynov claims that Tretyakov in fact became the person responsible for overseeing the functioning of the RosUkrEnergo gas scheme after Yushchenko's election. According to a report released by Prosecutor-General Svyatoslav Piskun on 22 September, Tretyakov was found innocent of any wrongdoing.
Turkmenbashi And Kickbacks For Gas
Turchynov also said the SBU had turned to the Turkmen security service for information concerning the large sums of money allegedly being laundered to Turkmen leaders from this gas-transportation scheme. Soon after the request was made, Turkmen President Saparmurat Niyazov, who is also known as Turkmenbashi, ordered the arrest of Yolli Gurbanmuradov, the deputy prime minister in charge of energy and gas.
RFE/RL reported in June that Turkmen National Security Minister Geldymukhammed Ashirmukhammedov told Niyazov and the cabinet of ministers more about Gurbanmuradov’s alleged activities. "Yolly Gurbanmuradov, at the end of October [2004], received Internet information from representatives of foreign intelligence services about selling Turkmen oil at reduced prices," Ashirmukhammedov said. "After that, he established unofficial contacts with representatives of foreign intelligence services and offered his services to them...." Niyazov also accused Gurbanmuradov of having three wives.
Sources in Kyiv suspect that Gurbanmuradov was arrested in order to silence him because he knew the mechanisms of how money from the RosUkrEnergo gas-transport scheme was being kicked back to high-level Turkmen officials who were then placing it in offshore banks.
The shakeup in the Turkmen energy sector continued through the summer. In August, former minister and Turkmenneft head Saparmammet Valiev was sentenced to 25 years in prison for embezzlement and other purported crimes. Former Turkmenneftegaz head Ilyas Charyev, who was fired in June, was sentenced to 24 years' imprisonment. In both cases, the sentences were announced although there were no reports that the men had been tried. In September, Niyazov fired Guichmurad Esenov, head of the Turkmenbashi refinery, for alleged corruption and drunkeness.
Khudaiberdy Orazov, Turkmenistan’s former central-bank chief and now an opposition leader in exile, told RFE/RL’s Turkmen Service that he believes Gurbanmuradov’s legal problems are part of Niyazov’s attempt to cover up his own business activities.
A report in April 2005 entitled “Turkmenistan: People! Motherland! Leader?” by the Conflict Research Center Studies, a part of the Defense Academy of the United Kingdom, notes: “The president [Niyazov] has made claims that his personal fortune, for the most part stored in European banks, amounts to $3 billion."
Suspects Released
Two former senior officials arrested by the Ukrainian prosecutors office on charges of fraud, embezzlement, and inciting a riot were released from prison in September. Ivan Rizak, the former head of the Transcarpathian Oblast and Borys Kolesnykov, head of the Donetsk Oblast Council, are now free, and Kolesnykov has resumed his job as head of the regional council.
On 23 September, Yushchenko announced a pact with the opposition in which he promised to look into an amnesty for those convicted of vote rigging during the 2004 Ukrainian presidential elections. Commentators and law enforcement officials in Kyiv told RFE/RL that it was pointless keeping these people in prison when the individuals who ordered them to rig the vote were never investigated or arrested.
The case of the September 2000 murder of Internet journalist Heorhiy Gongadze appears to be stalled and the chances of finding and convicting those responsible for ordering the killing of the journalist are slim, according to an appearance on Ukrainian television by Serhiy Holovaty, a lawyer working with the Gongadze family.
During a press conference after being relieved of his position as the head of the SBU, Turchynov said that the SBU had authenticated the portion of the notorious tape recordings made by Mykola Melnychenko, a member of Kuchma’s security detail, which deals with the Gongadze case. The SBU determined that the recordings are authentic and not fragments of conversations spliced together and that the speakers were indeed Kuchma, former SBU head Leonid Derkach, former Interior Minister Valeriy Kravchenko (who is deceased and, according to the official report, committed suicide in February with two shots to the head) and current parliament head Volodymyr Lytvyn. Earlier the same recordings were authenticated by the FBI.
On the tape, Kuchma tells Kravchenko to “get rid of Gongadze.”
According to Ukrainian law, the recordings cannot be admitted into court as evidence.
Former Interior Ministry General Oleksiy Pukach, who was in charge of the Interior Ministry special units that followed Gongadze and who is suspected of personally taking part in kidnapping him, is in hiding in Israel according to Turchynov and the Israeli police cannot seem to locate him. Pukach is considered a key link in the chain of men who gave the order to kidnap and kill Gongadze and the perpetrators.
Other suspects wanted on a variety of charges are reportedly hiding in Moscow and in the United States. Former Sumy regional head Yuriy Shcherban, wanted on charges of defrauding the state of millions of dollars, is alleged to be hiding in Florida, while Volodymyr Satsiuk, wanted in connection with the poisoning of Yushchenko during the 2004 presidential campaign, is alleged to be in Moscow, as the former head of the Odesa state administration Ruslan Bodelan. Bodelan is wanted on charges of fraud and embezzlement.
Turchynov also pointed out in an interview with the website Obozrevatel that the prosecutor-general's investigation into former National Security Council head Petro Poroshenko's alleged involvement in five separate instances of corruption was "at best a bare minimum," given the evidence collected by SBU investigators into Poroshenko's alleged activities.
See also:
"Parliament Commission Says Kuchma Behind Gongadze Abduction"
"A Conflict Over Gas And Power"
"Criminal Cases Filed Over Gas Schemes"