Two more Yukos executives will be joining Mr Khodorkovsky in prison
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Two former executives of Russian oil firm Yukos have been sentenced to more than 10 years in prison each.
A Moscow court found them guilty of embezzlement and money-laundering in the latest twist in the Yukos saga.
The verdict came as the Russian state receiver prepares to auction off Yukos assets, estimated to be worth $22bn.
Yukos former boss Mikhail Khodorkovsky is already serving an eight-year sentence in a case critics of the Kremlin say was politically-motivated.
Lengthy terms
Lawyers for the two men, Vladimir Malakhovsky and Vladimir Pereverzin, condemned the verdicts as groundless.
The Moscow court heard prosecutors state that the men had siphoned off $13bn in an oil price-fixing scam.
Mr Malakhovsky, ex-head of Yukos-owned Ratibor, was sentenced to 12 years imprisonment.
Mr Pereverzin, former deputy director of Yukos' foreign debt department received a sentence of 11 years.
The prosecution alleged that the men bought oil at artificially low prices from Yukos' subsidiaries and then sold it on at higher prices.
A third defendant in the case, Antonio Valdes Garcia, fled police custody in January.
Mr Valdes Garcia, who holds Russian and Spanish citizenship, headed up Yukos subsidiary Fargoil.