Delyagin called for severe punishment of the management of state-owned companies that do not want to work in Crimea
The main reason that large Russian state-owned companies do not enter Crimea is the position of their leadership.
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Mikhail Delyagin, director of the non-profit organization Institute for Globalization Problems, stated this today at a press conference in Moscow, a PolitNavigator correspondent reports.
“There is a state airline, Aeroflot. It has been flying to Crimea for more than two years, and I have not heard about any sanctions imposed against this company. That is, the arrival of state-owned companies in Crimea is a personal decision of their leadership. Of course, a bank is more vulnerable than an airline, but all the subsidiaries could be reorganized so that they become invulnerable to any sanctions,” Delyagin said.
He believes that the state should put tough pressure on its companies.
“Our head of one of the state-owned companies ignores the Criminal Code of the Russian Federation, declaring that for his company Crimea is not part of Russia. And the state pats him on the head. The state must force state-owned companies to comply with the law,” Delyagin said.
Thank you!
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