Chelsea sale funds have not yet been given to Ukraine, MP claims

Former owner Roman Abramovich pledged that money from the sale of the club would go to aid Ukrainian victims of the war

Ben Hatton
Tuesday 06 September 2022 15:01 EDT
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Funds from the sale of Chelsea have still not reached Ukrainians, a Labour MP has said, as he criticised the government for “taking so long” to enable the transfer.

Around £2.5bn is earmarked to be sent to aid Ukrainian victims of the war, but Chris Bryant told the House of Commons the money from the sale is in former owner Roman Abramovich’s bank account.

A government minister said they could not comment on specific cases.

Chelsea was sold after Abramovich was sanctioned as part of the UK’s efforts to target Russian oligarchs and to put pressure on and isolate president Vladimir Putin following the invasion of Ukraine.

Chelsea were bought by US magnate Todd Boehly in May for £4.25bn, with an expected £2.5bn in proceeds from the sale frozen in a UK bank account to allow those funds to be diverted to a new charitable foundation to aid victims of the war in Ukraine.

Speaking at a session of questions to the Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office in the Commons, Mr Bryant asked why the money is “taking so long” to get to the people of Ukraine.

The Labour MP for Rhondda said: “One of the people who is sanctioned in the UK is Roman Abramovich. His Chelsea was sold on 30 May, but the billions of pounds are sitting in his bank account because the Foreign Office still hasn’t set up the fund so that the money can be given to the people of Ukraine.

“Why is the Foreign Office taking so long? When is it going to be sorted?”

Foreign Office minister Rehman Chishti said: “Whilst I cannot comment on specific cases, what I would say is that 1,100 individuals, including 123 oligarchs and their family members with a global net worth of £130bn, over 120 entities including all subsidiaries owned by these entities, and 19 Russian banks with global assets of around £940bn, or over 80 per cent of the Russian banking sector, in conjunction with partners, over 60 per cent of Russia’s central bank foreign reserves, have been frozen.

“That demonstrates our commitment that we will do everything we possibly can, applying our criteria set by this Parliament, to bring those to account.”

“Nonsense,” Mr Bryant shouted across the chamber in reply.

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