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Minister's death spooks Russian elite amid corruption clampdown

Minister's death spooks Russian elite amid corruption clampdown

News.com.au2 days ago
The reported suicide of Russia's transport minister hours after he was dismissed by President Vladimir Putin, sparking speculation he would be arrested on corruption charges, has shaken the country's elite.
Roman Starovoyt was buried in Saint Petersburg on Friday, with his family weeping at his open coffin before it was lowered into the ground.
The 53-year-old was found dead in his car on Monday in an elite Moscow suburb -- hours after Putin issued a decree to fire him, with no explanation.
Russian investigators say he shot himself.
Media reports said he was being investigated for corruption and could have been arrested within days.
While government departments sent flowers and some ministers attended a memorial ceremony in Moscow a day earlier, there was unease over the fate of Starovoyt, who had climbed the ranks of Russia's bureaucracy to a seat in the cabinet.
Many who came to the ceremony in Moscow refused to speak to AFP.
"It's a great loss. Very unexpected," said Valentina, a 42-year-old translator whose husband worked with Starovoyt.
"He was very active, cheerful and loved life very much. I don't know how it happened."
- 'Scapegoat' -
Starovoyt had been governor of Russia's western Kursk region before being promoted to Moscow, just a few months before Ukrainian troops captured dozens of border settlements in a surprise cross-border incursion.
His successor was arrested in the spring for embezzling funds intended to beef up the fortifications that Ukraine ended up slicing through with ease.
"They tried to make him the scapegoat... It's easier to put the blame on a civilian official," political commentator Andrey Pertsev told AFP.
The case is one part of a wider crackdown on officials alleged to have enriched themselves at the expense of the Russian army during the Ukraine offensive.
The crackdown is a Kremlin campaign that has ripped up previous norms about what is acceptable for Russian officials.
"There used to be rules, where people knew that once you climbed up high enough, they wouldn't mess with you," Pertsev said.
"But they do not work any more."
In a sign of how out of favour Starovoyt had become, Putin has not publicly commented on his death.
Asked if Putin would attend the ceremony in Moscow, his spokesman told reporters: "The president has a different work schedule today."
At the funeral in Saint Petersburg on Friday, two regional governors were the highest-ranking officials to show face.
- 'Holy war' -
While Putin has criticised corruption and vowed to stamp it out throughout his 25 years in power, his rule has been characterised by systemic graft, critics say.
The smattering of high-profile arrests has more typically been used to target opponents or come about as the result of infighting among those lower down Russia's chain of power.
But the military offensive against Ukraine has changed that.
"Something within the system has started to work completely differently," analyst Tatiana Stanovaya wrote after Starovoyt's death.
"Any action or inaction that, in the eyes of the authorities, increases the state's vulnerability to hostile actions by the enemy must be punished mercilessly and uncompromisingly," Stanovaya said.
In such a climate, it was inevitable that heads would have to roll over the Kursk failings.
Nina Khrushcheva, a professor at The New School, a university in New York City, said Starovoyt's apparent suicide showed the Russian elite was "scared".
The current climate is such that "it is impossible to leave the top brass", said Khrushcheva, who is also the great-granddaughter of Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev.
"This is something we have not really seen since 1953," she told AFP, referring to Joseph Stalin's execution of a close ally.
To the Kremlin, the Ukraine military campaign is a "holy war" that has rewritten the rules of loyalty and service.
"During a holy war, you don't steal... You tighten your belts and work 24 hours a day to make the weapons you need."
That atmosphere, said Stanovaya, has created a "sense of hopelessness" among officials in Moscow that is unlikely to fade.
"Going forward, the system will be ready to sacrifice increasingly prominent figures," she warned.
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How the Yuendumu police shooting death of Kumanjayi Walker changed the NT
How the Yuendumu police shooting death of Kumanjayi Walker changed the NT

ABC News

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  • ABC News

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The sun is beginning to sink into the desert horizon when a team of pseudo-tactical cops — police dog in tow — roll in to Yuendumu, a tiny Aboriginal community three hours from Alice Springs. It's quiet in town on this Saturday night, November 9, 2019. There's a funeral happening at the cemetery. But it hasn't been this calm for a while — a string of violent break-ins targeting the community's health staff has scared the nurses into Alice Springs for the weekend, seeking respite. And as then-constable Zachary Rolfe and his Immediate Response Team (IRT) colleagues arrive at the police station, with their long-arm rifles and bean-bag shotguns; it's about to get a whole lot more chaotic. WARNING: Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander readers are advised that this article contains the name and image of an Indigenous person who has died, used with the permission of their family. This story also contains racist and offensive language and images. The local sergeant, Julie Frost, is burnt out and overworked. She's called for back-up so her team can rest, and then tomorrow, at 5am, the out-of-town officers will join one of her officers, to arrest Kumanjayi Walker. It's a plan she's already discussed with his family, to allow him to take part in the funeral. Legally, the 19-year-old Warlpiri-Luritja man shouldn't be in the community this weekend, it's a breach of a court order. Culturally, he's required to return to bury his grandfather. Police tried to arrest him a few days ago, but he threatened them with an axe. Footage of that incident has already done the rounds at the Alice Springs Police Station, where officers can't believe the bush cops didn't shoot Mr Walker. Enter Mr Rolfe: a constable keen on "high adrenaline" jobs, with three years of policing under his belt and — a coroner has now found — a "tendency to rush in", with a "reluctance to follow rules". Confident in her plan for a safe 5am arrest, Sergeant Frost leaves the station in the hands of the IRT for the night, telling the visitors on her way out that if they do happen to come across Mr Walker that night, then "by all means, arrest him". Less than two hours later, Mr Walker takes his final breaths on the floor of a police cell, three gunshot wounds to his torso. The reaction was immediate. And divisive. The brand new NT police commissioner — sworn in two days after the shooting — travelled to Yuendumu with the chief minister to reassure the community the officer involved had been stood down, pending investigations into how a quiet night in community ended with a 19-year-old being shot by a police officer, inside his grandmother's home. Then-chief minister Michael Gunner, in a poorly phrased promise which haunted the rest of his political career, tried to explain there would be independent oversight of police, a coronial investigation, and that "consequences will flow" as a result. Four days later, Mr Rolfe was charged with murder after an investigation which many claimed didn't pass the pub test. An ICAC investigation later found no evidence of political interference in the investigation. For years, Warlpiri people grieved quietly, in their tiny town on the edge of the Tanami desert. Suppression orders protecting then-constable Rolfe's right to a fair trial prevented previous allegations of excessive use of force, perjury and his text messages from being published. Prosecutors tried to argue some of that evidence was proof of the officer's tendency to be violent towards Aboriginal men, fighting to tell the jury that a local court judge had found, months before the shooting, Mr Rolfe likely "deliberately" banged a man's head into the ground, then lied about it under oath. But Mr Rolfe's lawyers won that melee — one of many trial arguments which landed in their favour. Supreme Court Justice John Burns ruled the evidence was irrelevant to Mr Rolfe's decision to fire his Glock three times, in response to being stabbed in the shoulder by Mr Walker that night. Journalists were barred from writing about Mr Rolfe's history until after the jury had returned its not guilty verdict. Meanwhile, the details of Mr Walker's criminal history, his unsettled upbringing and health issues were splashed across the pages of national newspapers. "The way that he was portrayed was this really violent young man [who] was the reason for his own death, and we felt like we had no control over his story," his cousin, Samara Fernandez-Brown, said. Duelling social media campaigns kept a divided audience up to date with a long and complicated court process over several years. "Justice For Walker" became a carefully curated platform for advocacy for the Yuendumu community, treading a fine line between calling for Mr Rolfe to be jailed, and not prejudicing a jury they had put their hopes in. "I Back Zach" produced stubby coolers, and later, a police officer was sacked over a "Blue Lives Matter" singlet referencing the shooting. A now-deleted, anonymously-run, Facebook page called "I Support Constable Zachary Rolfe" posted daily updates from inside the criminal trial. 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Still hundreds of kilometres from home, and still calling for "Justice for Walker". Justice to them, however, could no longer look like Mr Rolfe going to jail. The coroner's court opened with an Acknowledgement of Country and an invitation for Mr Walker's loved ones to be heard. With the evidence live-streamed, translated into multiple Aboriginal languages and the coroner travelling to Yuendumu herself, the coronial inquest could not have been more different than the criminal trial. "It was identified very early in the inquest, I think, by the coroner herself, that a key factor here is this wasn't just two young men meeting in a house one night," Gerard Mullins KC, representing some of Mr Walker's family, said. "It was a history of both the Warlpiri people, and what they had been through historically, and also the Northern Territory police and their attitudes to Indigenous people." As she opened what was supposed to be a three-month investigation into the shooting, Judge Elisabeth Armitage asked herself one question: "Do I know the story of Kumanjayi Walker and Constable Zachary Rolfe? "Do you?" With a comforting smile from her bench overlooking courtroom one in the Alice Springs Local Court, Judge Armitage invited the 16 interested parties to "look a little deeper and listen a little longer". Almost three years later, the judge once again travelled down the Tanami Road into Yuendumu, with a 683-page report tucked under her arm. She addressed the community for almost an hour, in remarks which were also broadcast live on national television. Somehow, she managed to keep her voice from wavering, as she summarised the findings which will likely define her career. "Kumanjayi's death in Yuendumu on 9 November, 2019 was avoidable," she found. "Mr Rolfe was racist. "He worked in, and was the beneficiary of, an organisation with hallmarks of institutional racism." If a reckoning in the ranks of the Northern Territory Police Force wasn't required before, there was no escaping it now. "The fact that [racism] did exist and the fact that it was permitted and fostered is just not acceptable," Acting Commissioner Martin Dole said. "There's probably some feelings of hurt amongst the police force, there's probably some feelings of denial. After examining an 8,000-page download of Mr Rolfe's phone, the coroner found racial slurs were "normalised" between officers on the Alice Springs beat, with no disciplinary consequence. "I find that these and similar messages reveal the extent to which Mr Rolfe had dehumanised the largely Aboriginal population he was policing, his disinterest in the risk of injury associated with his hands on policing style, and the sense of impunity with which he approached the use of force," Judge Armitage wrote. While she said she could not find with "certainty" that Mr Rolfe's racist attitudes contributed to Mr Walker's death, she also could not rule it out. "That I cannot exclude that possibility is a tragedy for Kumanjayi's family and community who will always believe that racism played an integral part in Kumanjayi's death; and it is a taint that may stain the NT police," Jude Armitage wrote. But the coroner, as she had flagged from the very beginning, was looking deeper than Zachary Rolfe and Kumanjayi Walker. She found Mr Walker's problems began before he was even born, exposed to alcohol in utero and violence, trauma and neglect in his formative years. Despite being deeply loved — and now sorely missed — by his family, Mr Walker struggled at every turn. Mr Rolfe, the coroner found, was not just a "bad apple", but a product of an environment which fostered problematic attitudes and behaviour. 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Ukraine says four killed in massive Russian drone, missile attack
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News.com.au

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  • News.com.au

Ukraine says four killed in massive Russian drone, missile attack

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