(9 Dec 2016) A top court in France refused Friday to hand a Kazakh banker-turned-dissident charged with embezzling billions over to Russia, saying it considered the extradition request from Moscow to be "politically motivated".
Mukhtar Ablyazov was released and walked out of the Fleury-Merogis prison a few hours later where his son, brother and three lawyers were waiting for him.
His lawyers had asked France's Council of State to block his extradition, fearing Russia would quickly send him back to Kazakhstan.
The Council of State noted in its decision that the Kazakh and Russian authorities have "repeatedly" held consultations on Ablyazov's case.
Requests for the return of criminal suspects can be rejected if they that are judged to be politically motivated.
Ablyazov is at the heart of a legal saga that has lasted years and spanned several countries.
A former energy minister who founded an opposition party in Kazakhstan, he was charged with stealing billions of tenge from a bank he founded, BTA.
Russia claims its citizens were defrauded in the collapse of the now-nationalised bank.
Last year, another French court, the Court of Cassation, had approved Ablyazov's extradition.
The French government signed an extradition decree in September 2015, but Ablyazov appealed to the Council of State, France's highest administrative body.
Ablyazov's lawyers argued he was being pursued because of his activities as an opposition leader in autocratic Kazakhstan, and feared he would not get a fair trial in Russia or Ukraine.
They also suspected he could be eventually transferred to Kazakhstan.
The banker fled Kazakhstan amid the nationalization of BTA Bank.
He was arrested in southern France in 2013 on embezzlement allegations.
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