Igor Sechin

Igor Ivanovich Sechin (Russian: И́горь Ива́нович Се́чин; born 7 September 1960) is a Russian oligarch and a government official, considered a close ally and "de facto deputy" of Vladimir Putin.[2] Sechin is often described as one of Putin's most conservative counselors and the leader of the Kremlin's Siloviki faction, a lobby gathering former security services agents.[3][4][5][lower-alpha 1] Until 21 May 2012, he served as Deputy Prime Minister of Russia in Vladimir Putin's cabinet,[6][7] and he is currently the Chief Executive Officer, President and Chairman of the Management Board of Rosneft, the Russian state oil company.[8] His nickname is Darth Vader.[9][10]

Igor Sechin
И́горь Ива́нович Се́чин
CEO of Rosneft
Assumed office
23 May 2012
Preceded byEduard Khudainatov
Deputy Prime Minister of Russia
In office
12 May 2008  21 May 2012
Personal details
Born
Igor Ivanovich Sechin

(1960-09-07) 7 September 1960
Leningrad, Russian SFSR, Soviet Union (now Saint Petersburg, Russia)
NationalityRussian
Spouse(s)Marina Sechina (div. 2011)
Olga Rozhkova
(m. 2012; div. 2017)
Children1
ResidenceMoscow, Russia
Salary~$17,500,000 (2014)[1]

Career

Sechin graduated from Leningrad State University in 1984 as a linguist, fluent in Portuguese and French.[11] In the 1980s, Sechin worked in Mozambique. He was officially a Soviet interpreter.[12] From 1991 to 1996, he worked at Saint Petersburg mayor's office, and became a chief of staff of the first deputy mayor, Vladimir Putin in 1994. From 1996 to 1997, Sechin served as a deputy of Vladimir Putin, who worked in the presidential property management department. From 1997 to 1998, Sechin was the chief of the general department of the main control directorate attached to the president, led by Putin. In August 1999, he was appointed head of the secretariat of the prime minister of Russia, Putin. From 24 November 1999 until 11 January 2000, Sechin was the first deputy chief of the Russian presidential administration.

Between 31 December 1999 and May 2008, he was deputy chief of Putin's administration. In May 2008, he was appointed by President Dmitry Medvedev as a deputy prime minister in a move considered as a demotion.[13] According to Stratfor, "Sechin acts as boss of Russia’s gigantic state oil company Rosneft and commands the loyalty of the FSB. Thus, he represents the FSB’s hand in Russia’s energy sector."[14]

On 27 July 2004, Sechin became the successful and influential chairman of the board of directors of JSC Rosneft, which swallowed up the assets of jailed tycoon Khodorkovsky's Yukos. He has additionally been president of Rosneft since May 2012. Khodorkovsky has accused Sechin of plotting to have him arrested and plundering his oil company: "The second as well as the first case were organised by Sechin. He orchestrated the first case against me out of greed and the second out of cowardice." [15] In 2008, Sechin allegedly blocked the replacement of the AAR consortium with Gazprom in the TNK-BP joint venture.[16][lower-alpha 2]

In 2008, Sechin was involved with the BP oil company and did private negotiations with the BP's CEO Bob Dudley.[17] In 2008, Hugo Chávez said that the idea for Venezuelan nuclear energy program came from Sechin. Sechin negotiated deals on weapons and nuclear technology deliveries to Venezuela.[18][19] In July 2009, Sechin negotiated deals with Cuba that brought Russia into deep-water drilling in the Gulf of Mexico.[20]

Sechin also presides over the Board of Directors of the United Shipbuilding Corporation, and helped with negotiations with France over the purchase of four Mistral-class ships. Sechin argued that two ships should be constructed in Russia and two in France, as opposed to the initial offer that only one be constructed in Russia.[21] Piotr Żochowski, of the Polish Center for Eastern Studies, argued that "it cannot be ruled out that Sechin's stance on this issue results from his personal financial involvement in the St Petersburg shipbuilding industry".[21]

On 12 April 2011, Sechin resigned from the board of Rosneft upon President Medvedev's 31 March 2011 order for senior officials to resign from large companies.[22] After Vladimir Putin became President of Russia in May 2012, he later resigned as vice prime minister on 21 May 2012 and rejoined the executive board of Rosneft as chairman and became the executive secretary for the Russia Federation's commission on the development strategy of the fuel and energy complex and environmental safety (Russian: комиссии по вопросам стратегии развития ТЭКа и экологической безопасности) in June.[6][7]

In December 2014, a CNBC article noted that Sechin is "widely believed to be Russia's second-most powerful person" after President Putin.[23] In December 2017, The Guardian noted that Sechin "is widely seen as the second most powerful man in Russia after Vladimir Putin".[24]

The Steele dossier alleged that Sechin met with Carter Page in 2016 as a representative of the Donald Trump presidential campaign, and offered Trump the brokerage of a 19.6% private share in Rosneft in exchange for lifting sanctions imposed following the 2014 Russian intervention in Ukraine.[25][26][27][lower-alpha 3] The 2019 Mueller Report did not corroborate those allegations, and neither Page nor Sechin were indicted with any crime.[28]

Sechin was instrumental in the arrest and trial of Putin’s former minister of economy, Alexei Ulyukaev, charged and found guilty of soliciting a bribe from Sechin. The verdict was delivered after hearing testimony from Sechin in a closed trial,[29] and is another indicator, according to The Financial times, of the power wielded by Sechin in Russian politics.[30]

In November 2018, Sechin released a statement at the first Russian-Chinese Energy Business Forum in Beijing, about increased levels of cooperation between Rosneft and Chinese owned energy companies, citing “increased protectionism and threats of trade wars” as a reason for the cooperation.[31][32] Agreements of cooperation were signed between Rosneft and Chinese Hengli Group and include expansion in exploration as well as production and refining.[33]

Sanctions

On 20 March 2014, the United States government sanctioned Sechin in response to the Russian government's role in the ongoing unrest in Ukraine. The sanctions include a travel ban to the United States, freezing of all assets of Sechin in the United States and a ban on business transactions between American citizens and corporations and Sechin and businesses he owns.[34][35] Closely associated with Sechin, Rosneft is on the Sectoral Sanctions Identification (SSI) List.[36]

Personal life

Sechin has been married twice. He divorced his first wife Marina Sechina (Russian: Мари́на Се́чина) in 2011.[37] Marina increased her wealth after the divorce and made The Paradise Papers and, as of 2017, owns a mansion at Serebryany Bor (Russian: Серебряный Бор) in the Khoroshyovo-Mnyovniki District of the North-Western Administrative Okrug of Moscow.[38][39][40][41][42] After 5 years of marriage, he divorced his second wife Olga Rozhkova (Russian: О́льга Рожко́ва; born 1990) on 14 June 2017.[42][43][44] Olga sailed on the 85.6-metre (281 ft) St Princess Olga which was built by Oceanco in 2012 and delivered in 2013.[45][46][47][48] After the divorce, the yacht was renamed Amore Vero ("True Love") in 2017.[44] As of 2017, she was often found on it in her favorite places: Sardinia and Corsica.[49]

With Marina, he has a daughter, Inga (b. 1982), who graduated from the Saint Petersburg Mining University and, as of 2018, works at (Russian: Сургутнефтегазбанк).[50] Inga married Dmitry Ustinov (b. 1979), a Russian intelligence agent and graduate of the FSB Academy,[51] and son of former Prosecutor General and current Plenipotentiary Envoy to the Southern Federal District Vladimir Ustinov,[lower-alpha 4] in 2003. Inga and Dmitry had a son on 4 July 2005.[52][53] She divorced him and, later, she married Timerbulat Karimov (Russian: Тимербулат Каримов) (b. 1974), a former investment banker and senior vice-president of VTB Bank from October 2011 until February 2014. He is on the board of directors for the Russian Copper Company (Russian: АО «Русская медная компания») which is the third largest in Russia and owned by Igor Altushkin. Since September 2015, she is the only owner of the Moscow based company Khoroshiye Lyudi or Good People (Russian: ООО «Хорошие люди»), which on 4 December 2015, became a 40% owner of the Novgorod Agropark (Russian: ООО «Новгородский агропарк»),[lower-alpha 5] a turkey farm located in Veliky Novgorod.[54][55][56][57]

After the demotion of Vladimir Ustinov in 2006, Sechin reportedly arranged the appointment of Alexander Bastrykin, another ally of his, as Chairman of the Investigative Committee of the Prosecutor General's Office in 2007 in order to retain his influence.[58][59][60]

His son from his marriage to Marina, Ivan (b. 1989), graduated from the Lomonosov business school at Moscow State University and works closely with Igor, as of 2018, as First Deputy Director of the Department of Joint Offshore Projects at Rosneft.[61]

Varvara is his daughter from his marriage to Olga.[42][61]

Notes

  1. Other siloviki close to Sechin include Nikolai Patrushev, Alexander Bortnikov, and Viktor Ivanov.[5]
  2. Alfa Group–Access Industries–Renova consortium (AAR) was led by Mikhail Fridman, Len Blavatnik, and Viktor Vekselberg through their companies, TNK, Sidanko, and Onako and their subsidiaries.[16]
  3. Also, Page met with Igor Diveykin, a deputy chief for internal policy with interests about United States elections.[26]
  4. In 2010, Vladimir Ustinov's daughter and Dmitry Ustinov's sister, Irina Dmitrievna Ustinova (Russian: Устинова Ирина Дмитриевна) lived in Sochi and is an assistant prosecutor in south Russia's Khostinsky district (Russian: Хостинский район), a district of the city of Sochi.[51]
  5. The other owners are 40% by Ildus Fahretdinov through an Ufa "Investment Company" LLC (Russian: ООО «Инвестиционная компания») and 20% by Oleg Chernyavsky through the Moscow "Negotsiant TK" LLC (Russian: ООО «Негоциант ТК»).[54] In 2015, Russia produced nearly 150 thousand tons of turkey by slaughter weight. The Novgorod Agropark expects to produce from 22 to 30 thousand tons per year.

References

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  2. The Guardian. 12 January 2017. Page 6.
  3. Hahn, Gordon (21 July 2008). "The Siloviki Downgraded. In Russia's New Configuration of Power". Archived from the original on 31 December 2010. Retrieved 11 December 2016.
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  6. И.Сечин вошел в список ста наиболее влиятельных людей мира: Глава "Роснефти" Игорь Сечин стал единственным россиянином, включенным в ежегодно составляемый журналом Time список из ста наиболее влиятельных в мире людей. [I. Sechin entered the list of the hundred most influential people in the world: The head of Rosneft, Igor Sechin, was the only Russian included in the list of the hundred most influential people in the world annually compiled by Time magazine.]. RBK (in Russian). 18 April 2013. Archived from the original on 27 March 2016. Retrieved 20 March 2020.
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  39. Shleynov, Roman (5 November 2017). "Wife of Putin's Number Two Man Gets Rich Quick". OCCRP. Retrieved 20 March 2020.
  40. Шлейнов, Роман (Shleynov, Roman) (8 November 2017). Как бывшая супруга главы «Роснефти», не имевшая ни рубля дохода, сразу после развода обзавелась активами на миллиарды рублей и компанией на Каймановых островах [As the former wife of the head of Rosneft, who did not have a single ruble of income, immediately after the divorce, she acquired billions of rubles of assets and a company in the Cayman Islands]. Novaya Gazeta (in Russian). Retrieved 20 March 2020.
  41. Васильев, Иван (Vasiliev, Ivan) (6 November 2017). Марина Сечина назвала бредом информацию из «Райского досье»: По ее словам, она никогда не инвестировала в проекты австрийского бизнесмена Джулиуса Майнла [Marina Sechina called delirium information from the "Paradise dossier": According to her, she never invested in the projects of the Austrian businessman Julius Meinl]. Vedomosti (in Russian). Retrieved 20 March 2020.
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  44. Демьянова, Саша (Demyanova, Sasha) (17 November 2017). Игорь Сечин после развода переименовал роскошную яхту, носившую имя бывшей жены [Igor Sechin after the divorce renamed the luxury yacht that bore the name of his ex-wife]. Cosmopolitan (in Russian). Retrieved 20 March 2020.
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  52. "Дочь Игоря Сечина родила от сына Владимира Устинова" [Igor Sechin's daughter gave birth to his son Vladimir Ustinov] (in Russian). newsru.com. 8 July 2005. Archived from the original on 1 July 2018. Retrieved 22 March 2018.
  53. "Igor Sechin has grandson" (in Russian). Moskovskij Komsomolets. 8 July 2005. Archived from the original on 19 March 2007. Retrieved 22 March 2018.
  54. "Семейный бизнес лучше банковского: Тимербулат Каримов покинул ВТБ" [Family business is better than banking: Timerbulat Karimov left VTB]. Kommersant. 6 February 2014. Retrieved 22 March 2018.
  55. Osipov, Anton (3 October 2011). "Тимербулат Каримов стал старшим вице-президентом ВТБ" [Timerbulat Karimov became Senior Vice President of VTB] (in Russian). Vedomosti. Retrieved 26 March 2018.
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  57. Burlakova, Ekaterina (25 May 2016). "заинтересовалась производством индейки: Компания, совладельцем которой является Инга Каримова, дочь главы "Роснефти" Игоря Сечина, собирается инвестировать в производство индейки в Новгородской области объемом около 30 тыс. т в год" [Sechin's daughter company interested in turkey production: The company, co-owned by Inga Karimova, the daughter of the head of Rosneft Igor Sechin, is going to invest in the production of turkey in the Novgorod region of about 30 thousand tons per year] (in Russian). RBC. Retrieved 22 March 2018.
  58. Бастрыкин, Александр [Bastrykin, Alexander] (in Russian). Lenta.ru.
  59. Однокашник президента возглавит прокурорское следствие [Presidential classmate will lead the prosecution investigation] (in Russian). Kommersant.ru. 22 June 2007.
  60. Stanovaya, Tatyana (22 June 2007). Сечинский комитет при Генпрокуратуре [Sechin committee at the Prosecutor General’s Office] (in Russian). Politcom.ru.
  61. Мельникова, Алина (Melnikova, Alina) (9 November 2018). "Игорь Сечин: биография, личная жизнь, семья, жена, дети — фото" [Igor Sechin: biography, personal life, family, wife, children - photo]. Krestyanka (in Russian). Retrieved 10 November 2020.
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