The boy’s name is Volodya Yakunin.
He was last seen yesterday, when he not only complained that he had nothing to wear,
but also said that, poor thing, he had nowhere to live:
We are looking for little Volodya for a very noble purpose. As soon as we learned about his cramped living conditions, we immediately found him an excellent home in the city center. Here it is:
Little Volodya has probably completely forgotten that he once, by some crafty means, privatized a huge apartment in a government-owned residential building in the name of his 12-year-old grandson (yes, strange as it may seem, little Volodya has a grandson), Igor Yakunin, who now lives in London with his father, Andrei Yakunin.
A magnificent new building with excellent neighbors—one of Sobyanin’s daughters, for example, lives here too.
A separate question is how this boy, after privatizing one government apartment, managed to get another company apartment from Russian Railways. It is unclear.
But in any case, let everyone know: little Volodya will not end up on the street. The four-room apartment, 156 square meters (about 1,680 square feet), in central Moscow, built with taxpayers’ money and handed over to our boy, is still there. No one has touched it. Ready for move-in.
PS As for the sale of the dacha in Akulinino, I think our boy is lying. It was originally registered to an offshore company. We will try to verify it, but we have no doubt that the country estate has remained within the shadow business empire of our railway man.
PPS Vote for criminal liability for boys who enrich themselves illegally—it is their worst nightmare.