Vladimir Putin’s point man for developing Russia’s vast Arctic resources has died after ‘falling overboard’ while sailing off the country’s Pacific coast. Ivan Pechorin, 39, was managing director of Putin’s Far East and Arctic Development Corporation and had recently attended a major conference hosted by the Kremlin warmonger in Vladivostok.

He is the latest in a long line of senior officials linked to Russia’s energy sector and the Kremlin to die in suspicious circumstances in recent months. Pechorin fell off the side of a boat in the waters close to Russky Island near Cape Ignatiev, said Russian daily Komsomolskaya Pravda.

His body was found after a search lasting more than a day. ‘Ivan’s death is an irreparable loss for friends and colleagues, a great loss for the corporation,’ an official statement from the corporation read. ‘We offer our sincere condolences to the family and friends.’


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The corporation’s former CEO Igor Nosov, 43, also died suddenly in February, reportedly from a stroke. Development of the Arctic – a rich source of oil and gas for Russia – is seen as essential amid sanctions and unprecedented economic problems facing Putin’s economy due to his war in Ukraine.

Pechorin was also responsible for the development of the air industry across the vast east of Russia, a sector under particular strain from Western economic curbs. He recently addressed the Eastern Economic Forum led by Putin in a session aimed at beating sanctions called ‘Everyone has their Own Route: The Logistics of a Changed World’.

But his death is merely the most recent in a series of unexplained incidents from just before and during the war with Ukraine which have seen a slew of Russian powerbrokers meet a sticky end.

Every death has been passed off as an accident or suicide by authorities, but many believe that officials who are seen as a threat to Putin’s power, most likely due to the sensitive information to which they are privy, are simply being removed from the playing field.

On September 1, oil tycoon Ravil Maganov, 67, fell to his death from the sixth-floor window of a Moscow hospital. One report said the chairman of Lukoil – Russia’s second-largest oil company – was ‘beaten’ before he was ‘thrown out of a window’, though this has not been independently confirmed.

Lukoil had previously voiced opposition to the war in Ukraine. Maganov’s death came shortly before Putin arrived at the elite Central Clinical Hospital to pay his last respects to final Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev, who had died at the hospital just days earlier.

In July, Yuri Voronov, 61, head of a transport and logistics company for a Gazprom-linked company, was found dead in his swimming pool amid reports of foul play.

Two more deaths of Gazprom-linked executives were reported in elite homes near St Petersburg, stoking suspicions that the deaths may well have been murders.

Alexander Tyulakov, 61, a senior Gazprom financial and security official at deputy general director level, was discovered by his lover the day after war started in Ukraine in February.

His neck was in a noose in his £500,000 home in the elite Leninsky gated housing development, yet multiple reports claim his body had been badly beaten, leading to speculation he was under intense pressure from bad actors.

That came just three weeks after Leonid Shulman, 60, head of transport at Gazprom Invest, was found dead with multiple stab wounds in a pool of blood on his bathroom floor in the same gated housing community. (Daily Mail)