RA’s Daily Russia News Blast – July 3, 2013
TODAY: Amnesty accuses Russia of unlawfully transferring wanted persons; Snowden withdraws Russian asylum request; Maduro leaves Kremlin with oil deals; Rosneft completes takeover of Itera; Mayor of Yaroslavl detained; amnesty for financial criminals to take effect next year; OSCE urges resumption of U.S.-Russia adoptions; terrorist calls for followers to stop Olympics.
Amnesty International has accused Russian law enforcement agencies of ‘colluding in the abduction, disappearance, unlawful transfer, and torture of wanted individuals.’ NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden has withdrawn his application for asylum in Russia, reportedly in response to Vladimir Putin’s request that he stop leaking U.S. state secrets. The airplane carrying Venezuelan President Evo Morales home from a gas export meeting at the Kremlin was rerouted yesterday, apparently on suspicion that Snowden was on board. Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro, also visiting Russia, was asked whether he would take Snowden home with him: ‘What we’re taking with us are multiple agreements that we’re signing with Russia, including oil and gas.’ He’s referring to the news that oil giant Rosneft has signed a deal with PDVSA, covering a range of joint research and development projects. The company announced that it has bought the remaining 49% of gas company Itera for $2.9 billion. Its increase in production in June has led to another post-Soviet output record, whilst output at TNK-BP declined in the first six months of the year. VTB missed its first-quarter profit forecasts, sparking speculation that Russian banks are suffering from the current economic climate. State private equity fund, the Russian Direct Investment Fund (RDIF), is to buy a stake in Rostelecom.