Kremlin wants US to prove allegations of Putin's corrupt activities

Putin's spokesman Dmitry Peskov stated that accusations from a representative of the US Treasury about the corruptness of Russian President Vladimir Putin were fictitious.

"None of these questions require an answer, because they are pure fiction," Dmitry Peskov said.

Earlier, Adam Szubin, the officer in charge of sanctions at the US Treasury Department suggested that the Russian president was enriching his friends and close allies while marginalizing those whom he does not consider his friends.

"Whether that's Russia's energy wealth, whether it's other state contracts, he directs those to whom he believes will serve him and excludes those who don't. To me, that is a picture of corruption," Szubin told the BBC. "He supposedly draws a state salary of something like $110,000 a year. That is not an accurate statement of the man's wealth, and he has long time training and practices in terms of how to mask his actual wealth," Szubin added.

According to Dmitry Peskov, the material from the BBC was fictitious, slanderous and ungrounded. "If they leave such accusations without proving them, it then casts a shadow on the reputation of this department," Peskov continued. "Now the department will have to provide evidence and demonstrate that the remarks from an official representative were not slander," Putin's spokesman said.

According to Peskov, it is the US official, rather than the BBC who is responsible for exposing suspicions about President Putin. "We could have brushed it aside as an irresponsible journalistic exercise, if it wasn't for the official comment," Peskov said.

Pravda.Ru

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