Politics

Russian whistleblower's family thanks Canada for standing up to global corruption with Magnitsky Act

The widow and son of a Russian whistleblower, whose death in a Moscow prison has come to symbolize the growing chasm between the West and the Kremlin, said they came to Canada to thank the country for pushing ahead with legislation targeting corrupt foreign officials worldwide.

Last month, Canada became the fourth country to adopt human rights legislation inspired by Sergei Magnitsky

Sergei Magnitsky's son Nikita Magnitsky and his mother, Natalia, are seen during a news conference on Parliament Hill in Ottawa on Wednesday. (Adrian Wyld/Canadian Press)

The widow and son of a Russian whistleblower, whose death in a Moscow prison has come to symbolize the growing chasm between the West and the Kremlin, said they came to Canada to thank the country for pushing ahead with legislation targeting corrupt foreign officials worldwide.

Last month, despite fierce opposition from Moscow, Canada became the fourth country to adopt human rights legislation inspired by Sergei Magnitsky, a Russian tax consultant who died in pre-trial detention eight years ago after helping to expose a giant tax-fraud scheme allegedly perpetrated by law enforcement officials in Russia. These same officials then charged Magnitsky with tax evasion.

"First of all, I would like to say thank you very much to everybody who took part in the creation of this law. We are very happy that it bears the name of Sergei Magnitsky and will always remain in the people's memory that way," Magnitsky's widow Natalia told CBC News' Diana Swain.

"I would like to also highlight that this law has global character. It's aimed at fighting corruption in all countries," she said through an interpreter.  

Nikita Magnitsky said he was very proud of his late father for his actions and for standing up to corruption and that coming to Canada was "a good way to honour his memory."

The 16-year-old aspiring artist said he wanted to present Prime Minister Justin Trudeau with a very personal gift, a still-life he had painted.

Conservative MP James Bezan, who was one of the co-sponsors of the legislation, said Magnitsky's widow and son, had been wanting to come to Canada to witness the vote but they were unable to arrange their visit in time.

"This is their chance to come now to pay their gratitude to Canadian parliamentarians who unanimously passed this Bill S-226 in both the House of Commons and the Senate," Bezan said in an interview.

"All politicians, of all stripes, stood up and were counted to support the Magnitsky family in the memory of Sergei, who was a freedom-fighter, who was a whistleblower and stood against corruption and stood for human rights."

The legislation, also known as Justice for Victims of Corrupt Foreign Officials Act, ensures Canada will never be used as a safe haven by those who abuse power and authority and try to hide their wealth in Canada, Bezan said.

Bezan said he told Magnitsky's son to very proud of his father.

"This is about him today, that we honour his memory and we celebrate what he stood for," Bezan said. "And that's despite his illegal arrest, his torture and his subsequent murder. This is what he believed in and that his memory lives on through this legislation not just here in Canada, but other countries that have adopted this kind of legislation."

Magnitsky widow and son react to the passing of Magnitsky Act in Canada

7 years ago
Duration 8:04
Earlier this month, Canada became the fourth country to adopt human rights legislation inspired by Sergei Magnitsky, a Russian lawyer turned whistleblower who was killed eight years ago after helping to expose corruption in his home country. This week in Ottawa, CBC's Diana Swain sat down with his widow and son for a rare interview.

Even though the legislation bears the name of Sergei Magnitsky, it is part of a global campaign, Bezan said.

"It's not just about Russia. This is a global approach," Bezan said. "But it's funny to listen that the only people who are making noise about this, and are taking offence to it, is Russia and the Kremlin kleptocrats."

The Russian embassy in Canada declined to comment but when the legislation was first passed the embassy slammed it as "a deplorably confrontational act blatantly interfering into Russia's domestic affairs," and threatened to retaliate. 

Maria Zakharova, the spokesperson for Russia's Ministry of Foreign Affairs, said the legislation "is harming the interests of Canada, in particular, by obstructing joint efforts to combat terrorism, bilateral co-operation in the Arctic and other areas."

She also warned that Moscow will "likewise expand the list of Canadian officials banned from entering Russia" if Canada increases its sanctions pressure on Russian officials.

On Wednesday, Prince Edward Island Sen. Percy Downe issued a statement saying that he has been banned from entering Russia for his role in championing the legislation in the Senate. Officials at the Russian embassy in Ottawa neither denied nor confirmed Downe's statement.

Downe is the latest Canadian politician on Moscow's blacklist, which also includes Bezan, as well as Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland, former Liberal MPs Irwin Cotler and Bob Rae, Conservative MP Dean Allison and former NDP MP Paul Dewar.

Russian officials have also sought to discredit Magnitsky's employer in Moscow and the driving force behind the international campaign to adopt anti-corruption legislation named after Magnitsky.

Moscow says that Bill Browder, an American-born investment fund manager who had hired Magnitsky, is far from being an anti-corruption crusader but is a fugitive tax cheat who defrauded Russian taxpayers of tens of millions of dollars.

In 2013, Browder was tried and convicted in absentia by a Russian court of tax evasion and sentenced to nine years in prison.

Moscow has also made several unsuccessful attempts to have Browder put on Interpol's wanted list.

On Oct. 17, shortly after the House of Commons unanimously passed the Canadian version of the Magnitsky Act, Russia named Browder in a "diffusion notice," which allows countries to temporarily bypass Interpol headquarters and seek direct co-operation from other countries to arrest wanted individuals.

Browder, a British national since giving up his U.S. citizenship in 1998, was temporarily barred from travelling to the United States and elsewhere as a result of Russian action.