MOSCOW - Russia's most powerful oligarch resigned from the Russian Parliament yesterday, saying he did not want to be involved in the ruin of Russia and and the restoration of an authoritarian regime.
The surprise resignation of Boris Berezovsky comes as President Vladimir Putin widens his offensive against the business elite, known collectively as the oligarchs, who made great fortunes through taking over the assets of the Soviet state for knock-down prices over the last 10 years.
"I do not want to enjoy parliamentary immunity," Berezovsky, formerly a close associate of the President, told a packed news conference in Moscow.
He said he wanted to be in the same position as other oligarchs, not members of the Duma, at a time when the Kremlin is waging a campaign against Russian big business.
Most Russians will find it hard to take seriously Berezovsky's presentation of himself as a martyr in the cause of political and religious liberty. He is widely considered as the apotheosis of the businessmen who used their political connnections to make money under the former President Boris Yeltsin.
Berezovsky also said he was resigning because he opposed Putin's plan to strengthen the rule of the Kremlin over provincial governors who are to lose their posts in the Upper House of Parliament. He said "the conduct of the majority of Duma members [in backing the plan] is absolutely irresponsible." He accused them of becoming the legal department of the Government.
Berezovsky's motives are perplexing. He was an important supporter of Putin during the election in March when his television station, ORT, gave the President its total support. His companies were not among those, such as Gazprom, the national gas company and Avtovaz, the biggest car-maker, which last week faced demands for hundreds of millions of dollars in unpaid taxes.
Putin is showing that, while he was put into power by those who wanted to maintain the status quo of the Yeltsin years, he does not intend to remain their man. In his state-of-the-nation speech 10 days ago he attacked businessmen who "feel comfortable in conditions of disorder, catching fish in muddy waters and wanting to keep things as they are." Berezovsky is the most important member of the so-called "family" of Yeltsin, the group of insiders, who promoted Putin to Prime Minister and then to the presidency last year. Its other members include Alexander Voloshin, the head of the presidential administration, Roman Abramovich, a businessman who has prospered under Putin and Tatyana Dyachenko, Yeltsin's daughter.
In distancing himself from the people who brought him to power, Putin is relying largely on his old colleagues in the KGB security service in which he was a career officer. This is quite a narrow base against the multitude of enemies the President is now making - including the powerful provincial governors - but any action against the unpopular oligarchs will receive massive support.
The danger for Putin is that he may be taking on too many powerful opponents at the same time. The governors in Russia's 89 regions often rule like feudal dukes within their own domains. They are largely the old Communist elite transformed into capitalists. They will fight against any attempt by the centre to reduce their power. At the same time, Putin's officials and allies are eager to recut the economic cake in their own favour.
Putin's first moves against the oligarchs seemed like a matter of paying off old scores. Now that Putin has opened an offensive against many of the other oligarchs, Russia is facing a prolonged struggle for power.
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