The head of the foreign affairs committee of the Russian senate, Konstantin Kosachev, charged that the leaks were "stirring emotions and muddled wording," speaking to RIA Novosti state news agency today.
The papers leaked from offshore law firm Appleby reveal that VTB Bank, Russia's second largest bank and now under US sanctions, funded an investment in Twitter.
In addition, a branch of Gazprom energy giant through an offshore company financed an investment vehicle that owned Facebook shares.
Kosachev said the way this was presented in the papers was a "fantastic, phantasmagorical text."
"When it is boiled down, what is described here is standard and legal commercial activity," Kosachev insisted.
He added that "through stirring up emotions and murky wording" the deals are "presented as practically a plot against the foundations of Western democracy."
The findings emerged as part of the Paradise Papers released by the US-based International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ), which was behind the Panama Papers made public last year.
Speaking about the VTB and Gazprom deals, the deputy head of the international affairs commmittee of Russia's lower house, Alexei Chepa, told RIA Novosti that "This has nothing to do with politics -- this is business, commerce."
Shamalov sold most of his stake in Sibur this year and now owns 3.9 per cent, Vedomosti business daily reported. Russian Forbes magazine estimated his wealth at $1.3 billion this year.
Russia's opposition newspaper Novaya Gazeta was the only Russian media to take part in analysing the leaked materials. It reported that it looked at 13.4 million documents over the course of a year.
"Russia is not even in the top 10 countries whose citizens used Appleby's services," it wrote.
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