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Russian Oligarch's Donations Aim to Help Georgia Fight Corruption

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  • Russian Oligarch's Donations Aim to Help Georgia Fight Corruption

    RUSSIAN OLIGARCH'S DONATIONS AIM TO HELP GEORGIA FIGHT CORRUPTION

    Moskovskiy Komsomolets, Moscow
    29 Mar 04

    It is wrong to accuse Russia's oligarchs of being uncaring or
    miserly. It emerged yesterday that Senator Andrey Vavilov, former
    owner of the Severnaya Neft (Northern Oil) company, who has now
    retired from business, is ready to make his own contribution to
    combating corruption in Georgia.

    Let us recall the famous US philanthropist George Soros's announcement
    that he would supplement the monthly salary of Georgian President
    Mikheil Saakashvili by 2,000 dollars and his ministers' salaries by
    1,500 each dollars. The US billionaire wants in this way to make a
    contribution to fighting the corruption that is eating away at
    Georgia. The official salary of the neighbouring country's top leaders
    is absolute chicken feed. And therefore Soros's offer should indeed
    appreciably improve their financial position. The American's logic is
    that a Georgian president who receives 2,000 dollars per month simply
    has no reason to steal. He is able to buy everything he needs himself.

    The general consensus of opinion is that it was the Soros Foundation's
    money that paid for the "rose revolution" last fall. It seemed that,
    after Tbilisi, the leading financial speculator had decided to turn
    his attention to Yerevan. But it is now becoming clear that Georgia
    continues to be the central focus of his concerns.

    Andrey Vavilov informed your Moskovskiy Komsomolets correspondent
    yesterday that, on hearing about the Soros initiative, he is also
    unable to remain aloof. In his view it is not only the Americans that
    should be fighting corruption and, to that end, paying the Georgian
    leaders' wages. Corruption in Georgia affects Russia even more
    severely than the United States - we are neighbours, after
    all. Vavilov has set his contribution at the following level: He is
    prepared to supplement Mikheil Saakashvili's pay by 600 dollars per
    month and Georgian ministers' pay by 300 dollars. Vavilov reckons they
    will be happy in the knowledge that they are getting money not from a
    single source - the Soros Foundation - but also from Russia. This
    should increase the independence of Georgia's top functionaries even
    further.

    Andrey Vavilov did not clear his personal initiative with Saakashvili
    and his subordinates. But he hopes that they will accept it with
    gratitude. He is also calling on other Russian businessmen to join him
    in the fight against corruption in Georgia.
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