[Images
added by this website. Note the cowardly
way in which The Independent journalist
tips off its readers, in case they did not
know, that all the villains in this story
are Jewish.]

The
Independent


London, Saturday, July 10,
2004

Editor who unmasked super-rich of Russia is shot dead in Moscow

By Andrew Osborn
in Moscow

THE man who told the world exactly how wealthy Russia’s super-rich are and exactly what oligarchs spend their millions on has been shot dead in Moscow in a murder that has all the hallmarks of a contract killing.

Pavel Klebnikov, the chief editor of the Russian edition of
Forbes magazine, was shot at point-
blank range in a suburb of northern Moscow near the city’s botanical gardens at around 10pm last night. He died later in an ambulance having taken four bullets in the chest.

Klebnikov,
41, a US citizen born in New York, was descended from White Russian
émigrés who fled the country when Communists seized power.

He had made powerful enemies writing a damning book about Boris
Berezovsky
, left, the tycoon who has exiled himself in the UK, and another about a Chechen rebel field commander called Khoj-Akhmed
Nukaev
.

Klebnikov alleged that Mr Berezovsky, with $620m (£330m) to his name, was involved in the criminal underworld and became embroiled in a protracted court case that ended in an out-of-court settlement and an apology from
Forbes.

Some said that
his book about Mr Berezovsky –
Godfather of the Kremlin; The
Decline of Russia in the Age of
Gangster Capitalism
– was
anti-Semitic
in tone and
overly critical of the tycoon at the
expense of other key characters such as
Russia’s former president Boris
Yeltsin.

In April of this year, Klebnikov ruffled feathers among Russia’s super-rich when he launched the first Russian language edition of Forbes
magazine, the so-called capitalist’s handbook. A month later he put even more noses out of joint when the magazine published a detailed list of Russia’s 100 wealthiest people, detailing exactly what assets they held and how they had made their money.
Russia’s elite was unimpressed.

One businessman who preferred not to be named told daily Vedemosti that he was furious with Klebnikov. “They couldn’t have published this list at a worst place at a worse time,” he told the newspaper.

“In our country, any discussion of personal wealth results in nothing but an increase in my blood pressure.”

Unnamed sources accused Klebnikov and his colleagues of vastly over-estimating their wealth and claimed that Forbes’ exercise was unseemly.

[Khodorkovsky]Some businessmen were irritated that their names were linked by association with
Mikhail Khodorkovsky, right,
Russia’s richest man and number one on
Forbes’ list.

They said the fact that Mr Khodorkovsky was in jail on fraud and embezzlement charges might reflect badly on them.

Others took
exception to the fact that Klebnikov’s
list
included at least nine
Jews and worried
that they would be targeted by
anti-Semites.

Many of Russia’s super-rich prefer to keep information about their real worth secret, not least to avoid the clutches of
Russia’s increasingly conscientious tax police.

But Klebnikov, it seems, has now paid the ultimate price for ignoring these warnings.

“Russia is sick with envy …. Russia will (only) flourish when each Russian citizen learns to value his neighbour’s success,” Klebnikov wrote.

An ardent pro-capitalist, he believed that the new Russia had a bright future ahead.

“Today Russia is on the threshold of a new era,” he wrote grandly in Forbes’ first Russian edition.

“I am convinced that we will become the witnesses of a great renaissance in
Russian society. Unprecedented opportunities are opening up before the (Russian) business world and new problems at the same time.”

In a country where many in the media appear to be in the pockets of some of the country’s super rich businessmen Klebnikov promised that Forbes would remain steadfastly independent of influence.

In an overt nod to the magazine’s original founder B C Forbes, he reminded the readers that money wasn’t everything and that “God, moral values and a sense of citizenship” were also important.

Klebnikov studied at the University of
Berkeley in California and at the London
School of Economics where he obtained a
Phd in 1991. Police are investigating the killing..

Copyright
©2004 The Independent. … on
the, ahem, oligarchs
Our dossier on the life and troubled
times of the Russian
“oligarchs”Shooting
is revenge for delving into Russia’s
rich (and Mr Irving’s comment) |
Berezovsky
sneers that victim ‘was like a bull in
a china shop’Khodorkovsky:
From billionaire to cage in
court
Website
dossier on the origins of
anti-Semitism