Full name | Leonid Eduardovich Slutsky |
Marriage status | married and has a grown-up daughter from his previous marriage |
Professional area/official position | Head of the State Duma Committee on International Affairs, Head of the Board of the International Public Foundation “Russian Peace Foundation”, Holder of a Doctorate in Economics |
Citezenship | Russia |
Birth date and location | January 4, 1968 in Moscow |
Leonid Slutsky biography
Leonid Slutsky was born on January 4, 1968 in Moscow. Graduated from the Moscow Institute of Economics and Statistics. Holder of a Doctorate in Economics, Head of the Department of International Relations and Integration Processes of the Faculty of Political Science at Lomonosov Moscow State University. Member of the State Duma of the Russian Federation of the third, fourth, fifth, sixth and seventh convocations. Head of the Committee on International Affairs. Head of the Board of the International Public Foundation “Russian Peace Foundation”.
Since 2000, Leonid Slutsky has served as Deputy Head of the delegation of the Federal Assembly of the Russian Federation in the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe (PACE) as well as the coordinator of the deputy group for liaison with the Parliament of the French Republic. Member of Presidium of the Independent Association of Civil Society.
He has authored several reports for PACE: “On the Activity of the International Committee of the Red Cross” (2002), “On Monaco’s Accession to the Council of Europe” (2004) which led to the decision to admit Monaco to the Council of Europe as the 46th State, “On Closing the Monitoring Procedure in the Principality of Monaco” – as a result for the first time in the history of PACE monitoring was closed unanimously on 1 October 2009. From 2000-2005, he visited Chechnya numerous times, including accompanying PACE rapporteurs on the situation in the Chechen Republic. Actively contributed to economic and social rehabilitation of the Chechen Republic in 2007. He was honored with the highest award of the Chechen Republic – the Order of Kadyrov with the wording “for exceptional merits”.
Leonid Slutsky's possessions and earnings
Based on official data, Slutsky’s earnings in 2011 were 1.9 million rubles (64.6 thousand US dollars), in 2016 – 4.9 million (73.3 thousand US dollars). Together with his wife, Slutsky owns 1.2 thousand square meters of land, a house, three apartments, non-residential premises, cars Bentley Continental Flying Spur, Bentley Bentayga, Mercedes-Maybach S500.[34][35][36]
On March 8, 2018, Alexei Navalny and his Anti-Corruption Foundation (FBK) released an investigation about the property of Leonid Slutsky and accused the deputy of illegal wealth accumulation, as his family does not have an official business, and its total income does not justify owning cars (only two Bentley cars cost about 30 million rubles).[35]
In the same investigation, it is mentioned that Leonid Slutsky has been renting a one hectare area next to the dacha in Rublevka, and has never declared it. FBK (Anti-Corruption Foundation) sent a request to the State Duma’s profile committee and asked to renounce the deputy power of Leonid Slutsky after the investigation.[35][37
Leonid Slutsky crimes
In January 2017, developer Sergei Polonsky appealed to Prosecutor General of Russia Yury Chaika with a demand to file criminal charges against State Duma deputies Vladimir Resin and Leonid Slutsky. According to him, two deputies extorted a bribe from him and “got 990 m² in the penthouse of the “Kutuzovskaya Riviera” for the contract registration”.[42]
Allegations of sexual harassment
In February 2018 BBC Russian Service reporter Farida Rustamova,[12] TV Dozhd producer Daria Zhuk,[13][14] former Kommersant reporter Anastasia Karimova and RTVi journalist Ekaterina Kotrikadze[15] accused Slutsky of sexual harassment through Dozhd and BBC. The accusations were discussed in Russian media all over spring 2018. In response Slutsky compared himself to Harvey Weinstein, claimed to be the target for defamation and provocation and threatened TV Dozhd with legal actions.[16][17]
A number of parliamentarians spoke in defense of Slutsky including so-called State Duma “female club” (co-chairmen of different political factions: Yelena Serova, Olga Yepifanova, Tamara Pletnyova, Elena Strokova) and the Duma chairman Vyacheslav Volodin who linked the accusations to political motives.[18][19][20] The United Russia deputy Oksana Pushkina supported the female journalists and stated in a television interview with RBC that, according to her observations and experiences, sexual harassment in the State Duma had occurred in the past but it never went public.[21][22]
On March 8, 2018 Slutsky congratulated women on International Women’s Day in a Facebook post and apologized to “those of them to whom he voluntarily or involuntarily caused any emotional stress”. RBC associated that apology with the sexual scandal in the State Duma.[23][24] The same day the director of the Information and Press Department of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Russian Federation, Maria Zakharova, also recalled the ambiguous behavior of Slutsky towards her.[23][24]
At the end of February the journalists from State Duma press pool approached legislature’s leaders with request to discuss the behavior of Leonid Slutsky.[25][26] On March 21, 2018 the State Duma Commission on Ethics headed by Otari Arshba reviewed testimonies and evidence provided by Rustamova, Zhuk, Karimova, Kotrikadze and Slutsky and came to the conclusion that there were no “violations of behavioral norms” in Leonid Slutsky’s actions thus exonerating Slutsky of the allegations. According to Arshba that was the first time the Commission had to review such a case and that the reasoning was limited to one person’s word against another’s. He also pointed out that the journalists were in the right to address the law enforcement authorities with the arguments and materials provided to the commission.[27][28][29][14]
In response to commission’s decision more than a dozen Russian news outlets announced a boycott either to Slutsky and Commission members in person or State Duma in whole.[30][29][31][32][33] Some newspapers like Meduza and Vedomosti in their editorial commentaries associated the decision with impunity of the authorities and noted that Slutsky should resign.[16][3]