Latest news with #Tuva


Bloomberg
19-05-2025
- Business
- Bloomberg
Russia Says China's Zijin Agrees to Keep Siberian Zinc Mine Open
Russia's Tuva region said it has agreed with Zijin Mining Group to keep the Kyzyl-Tashtyg zinc mine working after sanctions prompted the Chinese company to weigh suspending operations. Zijin's Russian unit, which operates the Siberian zinc deposit, will cancel its earlier order to halt the mine from June following a meeting between local authorities and Chinese company's President Zou Laichang, according to a statement from Tuva Governor Vladislav Khovalyg published Monday.


Russia Today
13-05-2025
- Business
- Russia Today
Russia sentences former oligarch over $300 million theft
A Moscow court has sentenced Russian former banking magnate Sergey Pugachev to 14 years in a penal colony on charges of embezzlement. Pugachev has been living in France for the past several years and was convicted in absentia. The Tverskoy Court in the Russian capital issued the verdict on Tuesday, also ordering Pugachev to pay an 800,000 ruble ($9,900) fine. Pugachev cofounded Mezhprombank in the early 1990s, and later served as a senator for the Republic of Tuva in the national parliament. He renounced his Russian citizenship in 2012 amid accusations of deliberately bankrupting Mezhprombank, and has since been naturalized in France. In the verdict announced by Judge Aleksey Krivoruchko, Pugachev was found guilty of large-scale embezzlement and abuse of authority. The court ordered the seizure of his assets and upheld a civil claim by the Deposit Insurance Agency, awarding 28.7 billion rubles ($310 million) in damages. The sentence was handed down in absentia as the French authorities have refused to extradite Pugachev, the Russian Prosecutor General's Office said. According to investigators, between 2008-2009 Pugachev coordinated the theft of funds from Mezhprombank alongside Aleksandr Didenko, head of the bank's executive board, and Dmitry Amunts, general director of ZAO OPK Development. Additionally, in 2010, on Pugachev's instructions, acting executive board chair Marina Illarionova allegedly signed agreements canceling collateral linked to earlier loan contracts. Prosecutors said this action deprived the bank of the means to recover loaned funds. The loans were never repaid, causing losses of at least 64.5 billion rubles ($796 million) according to the Prosecutor General's Office. Authorities said the damage led to the bank's insolvency and its inability to meet obligations to creditors.