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UK freezes record $13 billion in assets linked to two Abramovich


Chelsea owner Roman Abramovich is seen on the stand during the Barclays Premier League match between Chelsea and Sunderland at Stamford Bridge on December 19, 2015 in London, England.

Clive Mason | Getty Images

WASHINGTON — The United Kingdom on Thursday announced that it had frozen assets belonging to two Russian oligarchs worth up to $10 billion pounds, or $13 billion U.S. dollars.

The actions against Eugene Tenenbaum and David Davidovich, two close associates of the better known Russian billionaire Roman Abramovich, represent the largest asset freeze action in British history, according to a government spokesperson.

Thursday’s asset freeze came one day after authorities on the offshore tax haven of Jersey froze assets valued at more than $7 billion that are suspected of being connected to Abramovich.

This brings the combined value of the assets frozen to as much as $20 billion. In addition to the freeze, Davidovich was banned from traveling to Britain. Tenenbaum, however, was not.

Jersey is a self-governing Channel Island whose head of state is Britain’s Queen Elizabeth II.

But British officials said the Jersey judgement against Abramovich and the UK actions against Tanenbaum and Davidovich were coordinated.

They were aimed at cutting off potential sources of cash that Russian President Vladimir Putin could call upon to bankroll his botched invasion of Ukraine.

“We are tightening the ratchet on Putin’s war machine and targeting the circle of people closest to the Kremlin,” British Foreign Secretary Liz Truss (below) said in a statement announcing Thursday’s asset freeze. “We will keep going with sanctions until Putin fails in Ukraine. Nothing and no one is off the table.”

British Foreign Secretary Liz Truss in Warsaw, Poland, on April 5, 2022

Mateusz Wlodarczyk | Nurphoto | Getty Images

England, and in particular London, has long served as a hub for Russia’s post-Soviet billionaire class, and several landmark properties in the city’s most fashionable areas serve as second homes to Russian oligarchs.

But Russia’s brutal war in Ukraine and the international response to it is threatening the financial security that British pounds and British property once represented to Russia’s richest and most connected oligarchs.

British sanctions imposed on Abramovich in March are already forcing him to sell the renowned London soccer club Chelsea.

A multi-billion dollar deal to sell Chelsea is reportedly nearing completion, with four bidders still in the running to own one of Europe’s most successful soccer teams.

Unlike a high-profile asset like Chelsea, the holding companies now controlled by Davidovich and Tenenbaum (below, left) represent the other side of Abramovich’s empire, one that largely remains hidden.

Chelsea owner Roman Abramovich (R) and director Eugene Tenenbaum (L) celebrate a goal for Chelsea v Bolton Wanderers in Barclays Premier League February 25, 2012.

Jed Leicester | Action Images | Reuters

The international sanctions imposed in response to Russia’s…



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