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#13 - JRL 2006-171 - JRL Home
Moscow Times
July 28, 2006
Researchers Throw Up Their Arms
By Anatoly Medetsky
Staff Writer
Yury Ryzhov is at his wits' end. The Public Committee for the Protection of
Scientists, which he heads, has been unable to defend an increasing number of
scientists against charges of espionage and illegal technology exports, which
the committee regards as unfounded.
"I'm overwhelmed by despair. Nothing helps. I don't know what we are going to
do," Ryzhov, a prominent physicist and former ambassador to France, said glumly
to a gathering of scientists, defense lawyers and liberal political leaders on
Thursday at the Central House of Scientists in central Moscow.
Ryzhov was referring to the high-profile cases of weapons researcher Igor
Sutyagin and physicist Valentin Danilov, who were convicted of espionage after
working with British and Chinese companies, respectively.
A court in Ufa is expected to issue a verdict on Aug. 2 in the case of Oskar
Kaibyshev, the suspended director of the Institute for Metal Superplasticity
Problems. Kaibyshev is charged with exporting dual-use technologies to South
Korea. Prosecutors have called for a six-year sentence in the case.
The latest major case involves Novosibirsk chemist Oleg Korobeinichev. The
Federal Security Service has accused Korobeinichev of divulging state secrets.
The chemist has ties to U.S. and European research institutions.
A number of speakers Thursday criticized the Federal Security Service, the
lead agency in such cases, for asking the courts to hold espionage trials behind
closed doors. The classification of the verdict in Danilov's case "flew in the
face of common sense," said Ernst Chyorny, a committee member.
An FSB spokesman made no comment on the committee's accusations, insisting
that questions regarding Thursday's meeting be faxed to FSB headquarters.
FSB Deputy Director Yury Gorbunov promised in May that his agency would
release more information about such cases in the future. The agency has said
nothing about the cases against Kaibyshev and Korobeinichev, however.
Sergei Dzyuba, director of the Russian Academy of Sciences' Institute of
Chemical Kinetics and Combustion, where Korobeinichev runs a laboratory, said
Western grants for scientific work did not pose a threat to national security.
By providing grants, Western foundations are not trying to "buy up scientific
achievements on the cheap," but rather to draw researchers into the democratic
community, Dzyuba wrote in an article published Wednesday in Nezavisimaya
Gazeta.
The article appeared to be the institute's first public comment on the
Korobeinichev case.
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