Laying down the law in Russia
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Laying down the law in Russia

The government has changed, but the story remains the same: unscrupulous Russian managers ride roughshod over the rights of pioneering foreign investors. But the wild frontier of capitalism is not as wild as it used to be. Some recent disputes about corporate governance are far from clear-cut. And behind the scenes, the rule of law is being strengthened. Charles Piggott reports

A SUPPLEMENT TO EUROMONEY/APRIL 1998: EASTERN EUROPE

Dmitry Vasiliev, chairman of Russia's Federal Securities Commission (FSC), smiles as he leans back and says, wryly: "There is a new principle in Russia. The shareholder is always right."

That implies foreign trust in the Russian legal system and a key task facing the government will be to bolster investor confidence. Following president Boris Yeltsin's dismissal of the entire cabinet on March 23 a new administration will take on the task. At the beginning of March, then prime minister Victor Chernomyrdin had called on the government to protect investors' rights. "This has great significance for all of us," Chernomyrdin told those sitting around the table, "because foreign investment depends on it." The occasion was one of the first formal meetings of a new commission to protect shareholders' rights. "If we do not protect shareholders' rights, they will invest elsewhere," says Vasiliev, deputy chairman of the new commission.

This particular meeting had been called in response to the increasing volume of shareholders' protests that Russian companies are riding roughshod over their rights as investors. Even president Yeltsin has come under fire as outraged investors roped in their governments to lobby on their behalf.

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