Chairman of the Central Bank of Russia Elvira Nabiullina wanted to leave a post after the start of the war, but Russian President Vladimir Putin did not accept her resignation, writes Bloomberg agency with reference to its sources familiar with the situation.
it would be regarded as betrayal. On the fact that Nabiullina wanted to quit on February 24, the source of The Guardian was previously told. According to him, “it would have direct consequences for her and her family.”
According to the agency, some employees of the Russian Central Bank call their state hopeless. “At some point, the rate of layoffs was so intense that the IT department did not have enough hands to close accounts,” said Bloomberg interlocutors.
At the same time, other departments collided with a squall summary from Russian banks against which sanctions introduced, Meduza writes.