MOSCOW - President Vladimir Putin called on Friday for urgent action to clean 
up Russia's banking system, which he said was being used for criminal ends, 
after the murder of a top banker who waged a war on money laundering. 
 
 | 
    Russian investigators work at the site of an 
 attempt on the life of the first deputy chairman of Russia's Central Bank 
 Andrei Kozlov in Moscow September 13, 2006. [Reuters] 
    | 
Speaking at an emergency meeting of 
bankers and law enforcement officials, Putin said the suspected contract killing 
of central banker Andrei Kozlov showed "the use of banking institutions for 
criminal ends is, unfortunately, continuing." 
Putin's comments in the Black Sea resort of Sochi implied he too believed 
Kozlov, a first deputy chairman of the central bank, had paid the ultimate price 
for leading the fight on money laundering. 
Kozlov, 41, a father of three who had been closing down dozens of crooked 
banks, was gunned down by assassins on Wednesday night outside a Moscow sports 
stadium. His driver died on the spot. Kozlov succumbed to his wounds early on 
Thursday. 
"In my view, it is a manifestation of the intensifying situation in the 
struggle against crime in this area," Putin said of Kozlov's death. Putin said 
Kozlov had "worked in one of the toughest areas -- he worked with so called 
problem banks." 
Putin called for an inter-agency task force comprised of prosecutors, tax 
inspectors, central bankers and the security services to be set up to crack down 
on financial crime. 
Russia's bankers, meanwhile, offered big rewards, without giving a sum, if 
the killers were found. But despite launching a major manhunt police said they 
had no firm suspects. 
The killing of Kozlov, who was also well respected in Western financial 
institutions, was the highest profile assassination in Moscow in Putin's six 
years in power. 
In his comments, Putin zeroed in on the worst features of Russia's 
post-Soviet economy that is rampant with corruption. 
Many companies work hand-in-glove with fly-by-night banks to operate "slush 
funds" from which they pay workers cash in hand, bribe officials for contracts 
and avoid tax liability. 
"We are witnessing the laundering of billions of roubles every month as well 
as transfers of vast funds abroad," Putin said. He said laundered money was 
being used for "massive bribes, for criminal ends in the wider sense of the 
word." 
| 1 | 2 |      |