
#6
Exiled Russian tycoon Gusinsky gives up remnants of
media empire
AFP
July 10, 2002
Two years after fleeing Russia into exile, Vladimir Gusinsky has given up the
last vestiges of what was once a leading independent media empire to
state-dominated gas giant Gazprom, it was announced.
In a brief statement, Gazprom said Wednesday it had acquired all shares held
by Gusinsky in press and broadcasting outlets of his former Media-MOST group
taken over by the gas producer last year.
In line with the agreement struck between Gazprom and Gusinsky, who now lives
in Spain to escape from what he says are politically-motivated fraud charges,
"the details of the transaction are not being made public," the
company said.
The takeover in May 2001 of Media-MOST, which was endebted to Gazprom to the
tune of several hundred million dollars, sparked accusations from civil rights
defenders that President Vladimir Putin was crushing the independent media.
In particular its flagship NTV television, which was the only nationwide
independent network and won respect for its hard-hitting news coverage,
immediately began to tone down its criticism of government policy.
Echo Moscow radio, which alone among the Media-MOST outlets has maintained
its independent editorial line because of a deal giving the journalists
continued control and some shares, now fears it is next in line.
The radio claims a nationwide audience of one million.
"We were not officially told about the sale of shares, although the law
says that as shareholders, we had a preferential right to buy them and we had to
be informed," Yury Fedutinov, director of the radio station, told AFP.
"We are ready for any scenario," he added.
Gazprom, which already controls 52 percent of shares in the radio, has said
it plans to sell off all its media holdings by the end of the year, a sale
likely to raise 250 to 300 million dollars, according to the newspaper Vremya.
"This deal will increase investors' interest in Gazprom-Media
assets," the gas group's chief executive Alexei Miller, said in the
statement.
But Echo Moscow journalists, who have only 34 percent of shares, fear that
the gas giant may change its decision.
"If Gazprom does not sell its shares, as it has announced, that risks
complicating things," said Fetudinov.
For the moment, the journalists enjoy continued autonomy as last month
Gazprom met the station's demands to allocate four places on the board of
directors each to journalists and four to Gazprom nominees as well as one
independent director.
Gusinsky, quoted in the Gazprom statement, said he was proud of having
created "an independent media group which occupied a leading position in
Russia," and hoped that the new management would continue the same
tradition.
After the takeover of NTV, its journalists fled to TV-6, owned by Russian
tycoon Boris Berezovsky, another Kremlin critic who is also in exile.
But that station was closed down by a disputed court order and TV6 has since
reopened under new Kremlin-backed management, now called TVS.
According to the Russian press, Gusinsky still owned 30 percent of NTV, 42.5
percent of satellite channel NTV +, 48.3 percent of local television TNT, 25
percent minus one share of publishing group "Sem Dniei" and 14.5
percent of Moscow Echo.
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