Russia’s Putin raps Deripaska in crisis-hit town

PIKALYOVO, Russia, (Reuters) – Russian Prime Minister  Vladimir Putin publicly humiliated a top oligarch yesterday,  accusing him and other factory owners in a crisis-hit town of  greed and likening them to “cockroaches”.

Putin, playing on the anger of protesting workers in the  town of Pikalyovo, forced Oleg Deripaska, a top metals tycoon  and once Russia’s richest man, to sign a contract for supplies  to help idle factories restart operations.

“You have made thousands of people hostage to your  ambitions, your lack of professionalism — or maybe simply your  trivial greed,” Putin told Deripaska and two other businessmen  who own cement and alumina factories in the town.

“Where is the social responsibility of business ?”, he said  in the confrontation broadcast on national television.
Putin travelled to Pikalyovo, where hungry workers blocked a  motorway this week to protest over unpaid salaries, as world  business leaders gathered for Russia’s premier annual economic  summit in St Petersburg, 270 km (170 miles) away.

He rounded on Deripaska and the two other businessmen,  making a veiled threat to expropriate their property unless they  sorted out the situation quickly.

“Why was everyone running around like cockroaches before my  arrival? Why was no one capable of taking decisions?” Putin said  as Deripaska stared blankly.

“Has Oleg Vladimirovich (Deripaska) signed? I do not see  your signature. Come here and sign it,” Putin said, throwing a  pen dismissively onto the table.

His head hanging low, the once-mighty oligarch walked up to  the premier’s table, read the document covering raw material  supplies to the factories and added his signature.

After the meeting, workers cheered Putin and shouted  “Hurrah” as he told them the problems at the plants had been  resolved. Putin’s spokesman Dmitry Peskov said the premier had  been “quite strict”.

“The signal here is simple. The crisis and other  difficulties cannot serve as an indulgence from social  responsibility and you cannot solve your problems without taking  care of people, you cannot try to put all responsibilities on  the shoulders of the state,” Peskov said.

“They (businessmen) were not thinking about people at all.  There was no hot water, heating, people were not working and  were not getting their salaries…”

Residents in Pikalyovo called on the authorities to  intervene after all three factories in the town halted work and  stopped paying full wages. Trade unions say about half the  23,000 inhabitants of Pikalyovo are living in poverty.

Russia is facing its worst recession in a decade and has 7.7  million unemployed, raising fears of unrest and threatening  Putin’s main legacy in his previous role as president, eight  years of steadily rising prosperity.

Putin also told the businessmen to clear debts of 41 million  roubles ($1.33 million) by the end of the day and threatened  nationalisation unless the factories’ owners solved the  problems.

“If the owners cannot agree among themselves, then the …  complexes will be restarted anyway,” Putin said. “If you cannot  agree among yourselves it will be done without you.”

Lawmakers from Russia’s ruling party on Wednesday had  introduced a bill to nationalise the three factories. It was not  clear whether that legislation would go forward.

Deripaska, last year estimated by Forbes to be worth $28  billion, has lost most of his fortune in the crisis and is  trying to restructure billions of dollars of loans owed by his  flagship company UC Rusal to Western creditors.
UC Rusal, in which Deripaska is the largest shareholder, is  the world’s biggest aluminium producer.