Vkontakte Founder Flees Russia Claiming Persecution

By Yekaterina Kravtsova

The St. Petersburg Times

Published: April 24, 2014 (Issue # 1807)

Pavel Durov, the founder and former CEO of the VKontakte social network. Photo: Durov / VK.com

Pavel Durov, the founder of Russias largest social networking website, fled the country on Tuesday, a day after he said he was forced out as the companys CEO for refusing to share users personal data with Russian law enforcement agencies.

Durov, who created Vkontakte seven years ago, first announced his intention to leave the company on April 1 but withdrew his resignation letter two days later. On Monday, he announced that he had been fired and that the social network would now fall under full control of Kremlin-linked Rosneft CEO Igor Sechin and Vkontakte billionaire shareholder Alisher Usmanov.

The move to oust Durov is widely seen as part of a wider campaign by the Kremlin to tighten its grip on the Internet, and observers said the authorities aimed to cleanse the management of Russian Internet companies in the hopes of gaining control of their content.

Last week, Durov said in an interview with the New Times that the Federal Security Service had turned up the pressure on Vkontakte employees dramatically in recent months, demanding that Durov release personal information about Euromaidan activists. He said the Prosecutor General's Office ordered him to shut down a group on the website dedicated to anti-corruption activist Alexei Navalny, though he refused to do so.

I am out of Russia and have no plans to go back, Durov said Tuesday in an interview with Techcrunch, a news website focused on technology. He said he intended to launch a mobile social network outside Russia.

Unfortunately, the country is incompatible with Internet business at the moment, he said, adding that Russian authorities had targeted him after he publicly refused to cooperate with them.

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Vkontakte Founder Flees Russia Claiming Persecution

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