'Crooks' and their rights
As Mikhail Khodorkovsky and other Yukos shareholders were
going to trial in Strasbourg yesterday against Vladimir Putin for
unlawful expropriation, Zdeněk Bakala was suing ČSSD Vice
Chair Lubomír Zaorálek in Prague for slander about the old OKD
flats. Lawyer Robert Amsterdam, who represents both
Khodorkovsky and Bakala, was in Prague. (A bird in the hand is
worth two in a Siberian jail.) Amsterdam has declined to
compare the two cases, but both involve the rule of law and pit
powerful politicians against post-revolution billionaires. Putin
and Zaorálek claim their adversaries are "crooks" who profited
from the wild 1990s. A key issue is how far back the courts
should go. Is the recipient of "stolen goods" entitled to full
constitutional rights? In Central and Eastern Europe, it has
depended more so far on a person's political standing than a
reading of the laws or the constitution.
[Czech Republic Platon Lebedev apartments RPG Byty Properties
Russia]
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