Become an OC Media MemberSupport independent journalism in the Caucasus:
Join Today
Media logo
Corruption

Two former Ingush officials sentenced to five years for misspending budget funds

Two former Ingush officials sentenced to five years for misspending budget funds
Ruslan Tsechoev. Official picture.

A former Finance Minister of Ingushetia and another high-ranking ministry official have been sentenced to five years in prison for misspending ₽2 billion ($31 million) in budgetary funds that were allocated for state employees and housing.

The Magas District Court handed down the sentences to former minister Ruslan Tsechoev and the former head of the compensation payments department at the ministry, Vakha Bersanov, on 30 November.

The criminal investigation into the two was initiated four years ago, in 2015.

Tsechoev was placed under house arrest and did not appear at the final court hearing, at which time he was put on the federal wanted list.

According to Interfax, on Tuesday he was detained by law enforcement agencies in neighbouring North Ossetia and handed over to Ingush police.

Bersanov’s whereabouts are still unknown. A source close to the Interior Ministry told OC Media that he had also been put on the federal wanted list.

The source said that the court’s verdict had not yet entered into force and that Tsechoyev’s defence had filed an appeal to the Supreme Court of Ingushetia.

The court found that from May 2014 to March 2017, Tsechoev and Bersanov misspent ₽2 billion ($31 million) that had been allocated from the federal budget of the Russian Federation for housing and salaries.

The source told OC Media that instead of being spent as intended, the money was used to plug the budget deficit of the republic. 

However, according to the laws of the Russian Federation, that any money that is not spent per its allocation must be returned to the federal budget.  

To conceal the crime, according to investigators, Tsechoev and Bersanov returned portions of the money the republic received from the federal government in  January, February, and March 2015 back to the federal budget.

RIA-Novosti noted that Bersanov submitted forged reports to the Ministry of Finance of the Russian Federation on how the money was spent.

Unpaid salaries

In mid-February 2015, the Ingush media reported about the non-payment of salaries in dozens of budgetary organizations in the republic — including schools, child care facilities, hospitals and clinics. 

Shortly thereafter, the prosecutor’s office discovered that money for salaries to state employees from Moscow was received on time, but the Ministry of Finance of Ingushetia had used the funds for other purposes.

Following the prosecutor’s inspection, Tsechoev was removed as finance minister and the Russian Investigative Committee in Ingushetia opened a criminal case against him.

Tsechoev and Bersanov were accused of abuse of power, which entailed grave consequences, and of misuse of budget funds in an especially large amount.

Both officials are also accused of committing forgery, that case is still ongoing.

A change in leadership

While under investigation, in May 2017, Ruslan Tsechoev was appointed head of the Office of the Federal Treasury for the Republic of Ingushetia, by then-head of Ingushetia, Yunus-Bek Yevkurov.

Tsechoev left this post no later than July 2018.

This is not the first arrest of Yevkurov’s senior officials. In October, the head of the administration of the head of Ingushetia Muslim Yandiyev, and the ex-minister of construction of the republic, Mustafa Buruzhev, were also detained on corruption charges.

[Read on OC Media: Two former senior Ingush officials under investigation]

On 29 November, the deputy mayor of Nazran, Ruslan Ozdoev, was arrested on charges of abuse of power. According to Interfax, he is suspected of embezzling ₽24 million ($380,000) from the city budget. The money was earmarked for drilling artesian wells and installing water towers, which did not materialise.

Political analyst Denis Sokolov, a senior advisor at the Centre for Strategic and International Studies, told OC Media that the arrests in Ingushetia were the result of the change of the head of the republic.

He also said that under conditions in which there are no legitimate elections and ‘no freedom of speech’, accusations of corruption were the main instrument of political struggle in today’s Russia.

Sokolov said he does not believe the arrests will create systemic change. He said the team of the former head of Ingushetia, Yunus-Bek Yevkurov, would be ‘cleaned up’ and forced to ‘pay’ for the corrupt past.

‘And when the “degreasing” ends and new people take up key positions, the anti-corruption campaign in the republic will gradually subside. If another leader comes, everything will happen again’, Sokolov said.

Related Articles

Nazim Baydamirli. Image via Wikipedia Commons.
Azerbaijan

Former Azerbaijani MP sentenced to eight years in prison for extortion

A

Former Azerbaijani MP and businessman Nazim Baydamirli has been sentenced to eight years in prison by the Baku Grave Crimes Court on charges of extortion.  Baydamirli was sentenced on 30 September, following over a year spent in pre-trial detention.  His lawyer, Agil Layij, told Meydan TV that the charges against his client were unfounded.  Likewise, Baydamirli’s wife, Farida Baydamirli, told OC Media that his arrest was absurd. She said that the family never expected such a thing would

Image via Tabula.
Bidzina Ivanishvili

Georgian Dream denies allegations that Ivanishvili’s wife owns Russian real estate

O

A report by the Organized Crime Reporting Project (OCCRP) has alleged that Ekaterina Khvedelidze, the wife of Georgian Dream founder Bidzina Ivanishvili, possesses three undisclosed plots of land in Moscow, one bought as recently as this year. The joint investigation by OCCRP, iStories, GMC, Studio Monitori, and iFact found that the three plots of land were recently purchased as an expansion to three other adjacent plots Ivanishvili’s family acquired prior to 2012. This included a house that w

Vladimir Gasparyan, former Armenian police chief. Image via Hetq.
Armenia

Former Armenian police chief released despite being found guilty of abuse of power

A

Former chief of the Armenian police, Vladimir Gasparyan, and three other former police officials have been found guilty of abuse of power, forgery, and embezzlement by Armenia’s anti-corruption court, but have been released after amnesties were applied to all four.  On Tuesday, the court found Gasparyan, his deputy Levon Yeranosyan, and two other former police officials guilty. Vladimir Gasparyan was found guilty in two cases, but exempted from serving the sentence for one on the basis of th

The mansion of the family of former Armenian finance minister in California, US. Image via Hetq.
Armenia

US court seizes LA mansion of family of former Armenian finance minister

A

A US Court has seized a California mansion belonging to the family of a former Armenian finance minister, ruling it was purchased with funds of criminal origin. The mansion in Los Angeles belongs to Gurge and Artyom Khachatryan, the sons of former Minister of Finance Gagik Khachatryan.  On Monday, the Armenian General Prosecutor’s office announced that negotiations between Armenia and the US were underway on the return of the lion’s share of the proceeds from the house’s sale to Armenia. I

Most Popular

Editor‘s Picks