On June 1, 2009, Prime Minister
Vladimir Putin complained at a government meeting that last year's large-scale confiscation of smuggled Chinese goods on the Cherkizovsky market hadn't resulted in convictions. According to
The Independent,
The Sunday Times and others, Putin was furious that Telman Ismailov in late May threw a lavish party in
Turkey, celebrating the opening of an
opulent resort hotel there, despite him having made his fortune in Russia. On June 18, 2009, Russian authorities said they would destroy more than 6,000 containers holding an estimated $2 billion worth of pirated and smuggled goods which entered into Russia through the practice of
gray customs clearance. On June 25,
Alexander Bastrykin, head of the Investigative Committee of the
Prosecutor General's Office turned on the market, demanding its shutdown. State-run
Rossiya TV channel aired a programme investigating the smuggling connected to the marketplace and attacking Ismailov. Moscow's consumer department cooperated with the Chinese coordination group and agreed to allow Chinese merchants to clean up their stalls and ship out their merchandise from the closed market during a specific period of time every day. Gao said China had no objections to Russia's crackdown on illegal trade, but that the Russian side should try its best to keep the economic losses of the Chinese business people to a minimum. Some Chinese analysts noted that Russia's cracking down on
smuggling and rectifying its domestic markets would help regulate trade channels, improve trade environment, and therefore be overall beneficial to the sustained and sound development of bilateral trade between the two countries in the long run. ==References==