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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
World
Daniel Boffey in Brussels

Godfather of Vladimir Putin’s daughter among latest names on EU sanctions list

Russian cellist Sergei Roldugin is godfather to Putin’s eldest daughter.
Russian cellist Sergei Roldugin is godfather to Putin’s eldest daughter. Photograph: Dmitry Feoktistov/TASS

A Russian oligarch, who is part of a financial network known as “Putin’s wallet” in Moscow, according to the EU, is one of 26 businessmen, officials and military figures who have been added to the bloc’s expanding sanctions list.

Sergei Roldugin, 71, the former principal cellist of the Kirov Opera Theatre’s orchestra in the 1980s and godfather to Putin’s eldest daughter, Maria, is among those who it is claimed are threatening the territorial integrity of Ukraine.

An archive picture dated 2009 shows Roldugin, Putin, and Dmitry Medvedev.
An archive picture dated 2009 shows Roldugin, Putin, and Dmitry Medvedev. Photograph: Dmitry Astakhov/Sputnik/EPA

He joins a total of 680 individuals and 53 entities whose assets in EU member states are frozen and who are under a travel ban.

The latest listings include oligarchs and businessmen active in the oil, banking and finance sectors, as well as government officials, military figures and media personalities in Russia.

The invasion of Ukraine has prompted a raft of sanctions on Russian individuals, institutions and companies in wide-ranging measures that have helped send the Russian economy into turmoil.

Notably, a number of those targeted are described as being within Putin’s small circle of good friends.

The legal text approved by EU foreign ministers on Monday evening, says: “Mr Roldugin is a businessman with close ties to Vladimir Putin. He is part of Putin’s network financial scheme. He owns at least 5 offshore entities and he keeps his assets at Bank Rossiya (sanctioned by the Union), known in Moscow as ‘Putin’s wallet’.

“According to the investigation of the ICIJ, Mr Roldugin is responsible for ‘shuffling’ at least 2 billion USD through banks and offshore companies as a part of Putin’s hidden financial network.

“He also took part in ‘Troika Laundromat’, and he funnelled billions of USD through the system. Moreover, he received more than 69 million USD through companies within the ‘Troika Laundromat.’”

The Troika laundromat is the name given to a collection of 70 offshore shell companies whose controllers used them to move billions of dollars of private wealth from Russia to the west.

The network is said to have worked like a washing machine: money arrived from multiple sources and was then “spun” between network companies and sometimes between multiple bank accounts belonging to a single company.

Rosneft board chairman Igor Sechin (l) visits the Konevsky monastery on Konevets Island on Ladoga Lake in Leningrad region with the president, Vladimir Putin.
Rosneft board chairman Igor Sechin (left) visits the Konevsky monastery on Konevets Island on Ladoga Lake in Leningrad region with Vladimir Putin. Photograph: Alexei Nikolsky/Sputnik/Kremlin/EPA

Others on the list, include Igor Sechin, 61, the chief executive of Rosneft, the state oil company and one of the world’s largest crude oil producers.

He is described by the EU as “one of Vladimir Putin’s most trusted and closest advisers, as well as his personal friend” who is in contact with him on a daily basis.

“Igor Sechin’s Rosneft was involved in financing the vineyards of the palace complex near Gelendzhik, which is considered to be personally used by President Putin,” the EU text said.

A former KGB colleague of Putin’s, Nikolay Tokarev, 71, who is chief executive of Transneft, a major Russian oil and gas company, is also sanctioned.

group shot: Vladimir Putin, Lazar Matveev (l) celebrating his 90th birthday next to Rostec CEO Sergei Chemezov (r) and Transneft President Nikolai Tokarev
Vladimir Putin congratulates his former supervisor, ex-head of the KGB intelligence group in Dresden, Lazar Matveev (left) on his 90th birthday next to Rostec CEO Sergei Chemezov (right) and Transneft president Nikolai Tokarev (second left) at Matveev’s flat in Moscow. Photograph: Alexei Nikolsky/Sputnik/Kremlin/EPA

The text said: “He is Vladimir Putin’s long-time acquaintance and close associate. He served together with Putin in the KGB in 1980s. Mr Tokarev is one of the Russian state oligarchs who assumed control over large state assets in the 2000s as President Putin consolidated power, and who operate in close partnership with the Russian state …

“Nikolay Tokarev’s Transneft is one of the main sponsors of the palace complex near Gelendzhik which is widely considered to be personally used by President Putin.”

Vladimir Putin (l) and Alisher Usmanov, president of the International Fencing Federation, after he was awarded the decoration For Beneficence during a ceremony at the Kremlin.
Vladimir Putin and Alisher Usmanov, president of the International Fencing Federation, at the Kremlin. Photograph: Itar-Tass/Alamy

Alisher Usmanov, 68, a businessman who operates in the iron ore and steel, media and internet sectors and is said by the EU to be “one of Vladimir Putin’s favourite oligarchs”, is included.

Petr Aven
Petr Aven in 2020. Photograph: Valery Sharifulin/Tass

“Mr Usmanov has reportedly fronted for President Putin and solved his business problems,” the EU text said. “According to FinCEN files, he paid $6m to Vladimir Putin’s influential adviser Valentin Yumashev.

Dmitry Medvedev, the deputy chairman of the Security Council of Russia and former president and prime minister of Russia, benefited from the personal use of luxurious residences controlled by Mr Usmanov.”

Others listed are: Petr Aven, 64, who has been friends with Putin since the 1990s and is among 50 wealthy businessmen who regularly meet the Russian president; Mikhail Fridman, 55, a key shareholder of the Alfa bank which helped Putin’s eldest daughter, Maria, run a charity project, Alfa-Endo; and Dmitri Peskov, 54, who is Putin’s press secretary.

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