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Natalia Morari : ウィキペディア英語版 | Natalia Morar Natalia Morari ((ロシア語:Наталья Григорьевна Морарь)) (born 12 January 1984, Moldavian SSR) is a Moldovan investigative journalist for the Russian magazine ''New Times''. She was a permanent resident of Russia until she was expelled in December 2007, presumably for exposing corruption in Russia.〔〔(Journalist's Expulsion Remains a Mystery ), ''Kommersant'', December 18, 2007〕 Born in Moldova, she moved to Russia in 2002 to study sociology at the Moscow State University, which she graduated in 2007. Morar applied for Russian citizenship, which she was supposed to get in April 2008,〔("Natalia Morar, jurnalista care a infuriat Kremlinul" ), in ''România Liberă'', 21 December 2008〕 but the citizenship was denied citing national security reasons.〔("Morar to Be Held Accountable Under Constitution" ), ''Kommersant'', August 25, 2008〕 ==Investigations==
In May 2007 Morar broke open the story about a money laundering case involving Austria's Raiffeisen Zentralbank and several top Putin's administration officials, including FSB Deputy Head Alexander Bortnikov.〔(Чиновники уводят деньги на Запад. ) by Natalya Morar The New Times № 15 May 21, 2007 г.(English translation )〕 According to her, top Russian Central Bank official Andrei Kozlov had been murdered for pursuing those leads and revoking the license from the implicated Diskont bank.〔(Австрийская полиция может возбудить дело против ключевых чиновников Кремля, утверждает New Times ) NEWSru.com May 23, 2007.〕 In mid-December 2007, Morar published an article ("The black cash of the Kremlin" ) in which she described how a vast illegal political fund was used to keep all major political parties in Russia dependent on the central authorities during the 2007 Russian legislative election.
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