Categories: Top Stories

Breaking: UK Government Sanctions Chelsea Owner, Abramovich

UK government imposes asset freezes on Russian businessmen including Roman Abramovich, Igor Sechin, Oleg Deripaska and Dmitri Lebedev.

The Chelsea football club owner, Roman Abramovich, is among seven of Russia’s wealthiest and most influential oligarchs who have been sanctioned by the UK, in an effort to further punish allies of Vladimir Putin over the invasion of Ukraine.

Advertisement

Abramovich was found by the UK government to have “received preferential treatment and concessions” from the Kremlin and through his business links been “involved in destabilising Ukraine and undermining and threatening the territorial integrity, sovereignty, and independence” of the eastern European country.

The Foreign Office said he was implicated through a steel manufacturing and mining company, Evraz PLC, in which he had a significant shareholding and over which he exercised effective control.

Advertisement

It said the firm may have supplied steel to the Russian military for the production of tanks.

Abramovich’s assets have been frozen, and he will be prohibited from making any transactions in the UK, as well as being subject to a travel ban.

Advertisement

The share price of Evraz, a firm which is incorporated in London but with mostly Russian assets, slumped by as much as 13% on Thursday morning, following the announcement of sanctions. Abramovich’s stake was worth £1.4bn at the end of 2021, but had plummeted to only £320m on Wednesday evening.

It is the first time Abramovich has been sanctioned by the UK or any of its allies.

Advertisement

The other Russian oligarchs slapped with sanctions on Thursday morning were Igor Sechin, Oleg Deripaska, Andrey Kostin, Alexei Miller, Nikolai Tokarev and Dmitri Lebedev.

Deripaska was Abramovich’s one-time business partner, Sechin was said by the Foreign Office to have been Putin’s “right-hand man”, and Kostin, Miller, Tokarev and Lebedev were labelled as part of the Russian president’s “inner circle”.

Advertisement
  • Deripaska owns 45% of London-listed mining company En+ Group, which was led until Monday by Conservative party peer Lord Greg Barker. Deripaska’s stake was worth £1.6bn on Wednesday evening.
  • Sechin is the chief executive of state-owned oil company Rosneft and formerly Russia’s deputy prime minister. France last week seized a superyacht that it said belonged to Sechin, although Rosneft has denied he owned it.
  • Kostin, is chairman of the management board of Russia’s second-largest bank, VTB Bank. The bank, which was traded on the London Stock Exchange before the invasion, has also been sanctioned directly.
  • Miller, is the chair of the management committee of Gazprom, the state-controlled gas producer that was formerly a major sponsor of European football.
  • Nikolay Tokarev, is chairman of Transneft, a major oil and gas company.
  • Dmitri Lebedev, is the chair of the board of Bank Rossiya, said by the EU to be the “personal bank of senior officials of the Russian Federation”.

Boris Johnson said the move was a demonstration of the UK’s “unwavering support for the Ukrainian people”. The prime minister added: “We will be ruthless in pursuing those who enable the killing of civilians, destruction of hospitals and illegal occupation of sovereign allies.”

The sanctions on Abramovich have huge repercussions for Chelsea Football Club, which Abramovich was in the process of trying to sell. Ministers have effectively blocked that process.

A government source told the Guardian they would consider an application for a licence to allow sale of the club – but that it would not be granted if it benefitted Abramovich while he was subject to sanctions.

Advertisement

Nadine Dorries, the culture secretary, said a special licence had been issued to allow games to be played, staff to be paid and existing ticket holder to attend matches but that Abramovich would be deprived of benefiting from his ownership of the club.

“I know this brings some uncertainty, but the government will work with the league and clubs to keep football being played while ensuring sanctions hit those intended,” she added.

Advertisement

David Lammy, the shadow foreign secretary, said sanctioning Abramovich was the right decision but overdue.

“Too few oligarchs linked to Putin’s rogue regime have so far faced sanctions from the UK government,” he said. “We are lagging far behind allies in the EU and the US.

Advertisement

“It is right that, under pressure from Labour, the government U-turned to strengthen sanctions legislation. Ministers must now move faster to continue to close the sanctions gap.”

There have been 204 people sanctioned in total by the UK, and 65 entities.

Advertisement

The government has been criticised for not moving more quickly to impose sanctions, given Russia’s invasion of Ukraine began just over two weeks ago.

Critics said that those oligarchs fearing they could have their assets frozen would have speedily worked to move these out of the country.

Advertisement

 

Advertisement
citynews

Recent Posts

Olamide Didn’t’Blow’ Me…I Was Already Famous Before He Assisted Me – Portable

Social media reacts as Portable says Olamide did not make him famous He says that…

4 hours ago

VIDEO: You’re A Serial Betrayal – Deji Adeyanju Replies Wike, Compares Him To Portable

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wrCrpGJGU2o https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_jiGeHcBxxY Political activist Deji Adeyanju has launched a scathing response to Nyesom Wike, Minister…

5 hours ago

2027: You are taking your desperation too far – Ohanaeze youths slam Atiku

Apex Igbo socio-cultural organisation, Ohanaeze Ndigbo Youth Council Worldwide on Friday came down hard on…

9 hours ago

Food, fuel price hikes push Nigeria’s inflation to 33.88% in October

Food and petrol price hikes have pushed Nigeria’s inflation to 33.88 percent in October 2024,…

10 hours ago

BREAKING: Late COAS Lagbaja laid to rest amid tears, tributes

The late Chief of Army Staff, Lt. General Taoreed Lagbaja has been laid to rest…

10 hours ago

“How my South African partner defrauded me of $3.5m” – Common Sense Senator,Ben Murray Bruce

Former Nigerian senator, Ben Murray-Bruce, has revealed how he was defrauded of $3.5 million by…

10 hours ago