Russia’s Ministers Wary of New Year’s Gifts After Ulyukayev Trial

Kirill Zykov / Moskva News Agency
Russian government officials and state firm executives are reportedly refusing New Year’s gifts this holiday season after the country’s first serving minister was convicted for bribery last week.
Former economic minister Alexei Ulyukayev was sentenced to 8 years in a high-security prison for accepting a $2-million bribe last November from Igor Sechin, the CEO of state oil giant Rosneft. Throughout the trial, Ulyukayev claimed he had thought Sechin's gift consisted of sausages and wine. He later warned fellow civil servants that anyone was “three clicks” away from being charged with corruption.
“No baskets are [accepted] in any form, not with food, not with wine, not even with flowers,” a ministerial aide was cited as saying by The Bell outlet.
“[Officials] recoil from the sight of them.”
The Bell cited five ministry and state corporation officials as saying that the corruption case had a direct effect on gift-giving among officials.
“Last year we could give books and calendars as gifts, this year, after the arrest of Ulyukayev, we can’t give anything,” a corporate official told the news website.
Russian law bans civil servants from accepting gifts worth more than 3,000 rubles ($51).
A Rosneft spokesman told The Bell that the oil firm’s long-standing tradition was to give postcards.
“Our gifts clearly conform with company and local regulations, we do not let anyone down," he said.
[contf] [contfnew]
the moscow times
[contfnewc] [contfnewc]
The post Russia's Ministers Wary of New Year's Gifts After Ulyukayev Trial appeared first on News Wire Now.