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Wednesday, Mar. 6, 2002. Page 1
Berezovsky Says Putin Knew About FSB
Role By Patrick Henry
Staff Writer
LONDON -- Boris Berezovsky
announced Tuesday that President Vladimir Putin
"definitely knew" that the Federal Security Service was
involved in four bombings that killed more than 300
people in Moscow and two other cities in the fall of
1999, as well as a foiled bombing attempt in
Ryazan.
"At a minimum Vladimir Putin
knew that the FSB was involved in the bombings in
Moscow, Volgodonsk and Ryazan," Berezovsky told
reporters, adding that Putin's failure to order a full
investigation of the attacks constituted a
coverup.
Berezovsky said that Liberal
Russia, a political movement he bankrolls and co-chairs,
would file formal appeals with the European Parliament
and other international organizations in a bid to force
a full investigation of the bombings. Putin would be
specifically named in those appeals, he said.
Berezovsky noted, however,
that he had no evidence suggesting that Putin had
ordered the bombings.
In Moscow, an FSB spokesman
said Berezovsky's allegations were "untenable and devoid
of common sense," Interfax reported.
"Berezovsky's behavior is
predictable. In anticipation of charges against him, he
is trying, well in advance, to present himself to the
world as a victim and a fighter for political freedoms
in Russia," the spokesman was quoted as
saying.
Putin resigned as FSB chief
to become prime minister shortly before the spate of
bombings began in Buinaksk, Dagestan, on Sept. 4, 1999.
That blast leveled an apartment building, claiming 62
lives. Two apartment buildings were subsequently
destroyed by explosions in Moscow, killing 215. A fourth
bomb was detonated outside an apartment building in
Volgodonsk on Sept. 16, leaving 18 dead and 288
injured.
The government has blamed
Chechen rebels for the attacks, though it has never
produced evidence to back up this claim. The FSB
announced last month that all of the bombers were known,
and that some had been detained, though no details have
since emerged. The only convictions to date concern the
first bombing at Buinaksk. Two men were sentenced to
life in prison by a Dagestani court last year and four
others were given lighter sentences.
Berezovsky called Tuesday's
press conference in order to release what he billed as
new evidence of the FSB's involvement in the 1999
bombings, but no new information relevant to the
bombings was in fact made public. Asked if the press
conference was primarily a political stunt, the former
Kremlin insider refused to comment.
Reporters were shown a
10-minute clip from "Assassination of Russia," a
52-minute documentary soon to be released by a French
company, Transparences Productions, using footage
originally shot by NTV. The film focuses on the foiled
bombing in Ryazan on Sept. 22, 1999.
A bomb was discovered in the
basement of a 12-story apartment building in Ryazan by
local police. The device consisted of several bags of a
white powder connected to a timer and a shotgun shell
detonator. Investigators in Ryazan initially identified
the powder as hexogen, a powerful explosive. But FSB
chief Nikolai Patrushev quickly dismissed this finding,
claiming that the whole incident was merely a training
exercise with a dummy bomb, and that the bags contained
sugar.
According to Berezovsky, four
explosives experts from Britain and France had examined
the available evidence from the Ryazan incident --
including photographs of the explosive device made by
investigators -- and concluded that the bomb was
authentic. All physical evidence from the Ryazan crime
scene has been classified and sealed for 75 years, he
said.
Berezovsky said he had
initially planned to air the documentary in Russia on
TV6, which he controlled until recently. The film would
nonetheless be offered to the Russian networks, he said,
and could serve as an acid test of the government's
determination to find those responsible for the 1999
attacks. If the networks refuse to air the film, he
said, this will indicate that the government fears a
transparent inquiry.
The closest thing to a
"smoking gun" presented Tuesday was a statement by
Nikita Chekulin, who was presented as the former acting
director of Roskonversvzryvtsentr, a research institute
affiliated with the Education Ministry that deals with
explosives.
Chekulin claimed to have
documentary evidence showing that the institute had
purchased tons of the explosive hexogen from military
installations in 2000. That hexogen was then falsely
labeled and transferred to "various cover agencies in
the regions," he said. An internal Education Ministry
investigation led Minister Vladimir Filippov to ask for
the FSB to get involved. Among those Chekulin said knew
of this "possible terrorist activity" were Deputy Prime
Minister Valentina Matviyenko, then-Deputy Prime
Minister Ilya Klebanov, Patrushev, then-Interior
Minister Vladimir Rushailo and then-Security Council
Chairman Sergei Ivanov.
"Mr. Patrushev forbade the
investigation, and his deputy Yury Zaostrovtsev informed
the Education Ministry of this decision," Chekulin
said.
Chekulin produced no
documents Tuesday, however, and added after the press
conference that the information in his possession --
copies of official documents -- has no direct bearing on
the 1999 bombings.
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