Roman Abramovich pictured in Tel Aviv airport VIP lounge as his private jet takes off for Istanbul

Israel says it is no haven for sanctioned Russians as Roman Abramovich’s jet arrives from Moscow and EU announces sanctions against the Chelsea owner

The US is calling on Israel to join the list of countries to sanction RussiaSeveral dozen Jewish tycoons from Russia are believed to have taken on Israeli citizenship or residency in recent years Chelsea owner Roman Abramovich took Israeli citizenship in 2018

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Israel is grappling with how to deal with dozens of Jewish Russian oligarchs as Western nations step up sanctions on businesspeople with ties to Russian President Vladimir Putin

A worried Israeli government has formed a high-level committee to see how the country can maintain its status as a haven for any Jew without running afoul of the biting sanctions targeting Putin’s inner circle.

‘Israel will not be a route to bypass sanctions imposed on Russia by the United States and other Western countries,’ Foreign Minister Yair Lapid declared Monday during a stop in Slovakia.

Several dozen Jewish tycoons from Russia are believed to have taken on Israeli citizenship or residency in recent years. 

A Ultra Orthodox Jewish man prays near a Russian flag projected on the walls of the Old City of Jerusalem, 13 March 2022

The national flags of Russia and Ukraine are projected on the walls of Jerusalem’s Old City, which a spokesperson from the Jerusalem Municipality said is a show of support for diplomatic dialogue between the two countries

Many have good working relations with the Kremlin, and at least four – Chelsea FC owner Roman Abramovich, Mikhail Fridman, Petr Aven and Viktor Vekselberg – have been sanctioned internationally because of their purported connections to Putin. 

Some of the sanctions stretch back even to before Russia’s invasion of Ukraine last month.

Israel, which has emerged as an unlikely mediator between Ukraine and Russia, has not joined the sanctions imposed by the US, Britain, European Union and others.

But as the war in Ukraine drags on, and other names are added to the list, the pressure is increasing.

In an interview with Israel’s Channel 12 TV station over the weekend, the US undersecretary of state for political affairs, Victoria Nuland, called on Israel to join the group of countries that have sanctioned Russia.

Chelsea’s Russian owner Roman Abramovich, pictured, has fallen under sanctions – but he has a close connection with Israel, winning citizenship there in 2018

Abramovich is selling his Kensington property in London, and a Swiss billionaire said he’s been approached about buying Chelsea Football Club

Football supporters arrive at Stamford bridge for the premier league match between Chelsea FC and Newcastle United as the club’s future becomes clouded after its owner was sancitoned

‘What we are asking among other things is for every democracy around the world to join us in the financial and export control sanctions that we have put on Putin,’ she said.

‘You don’t want to become the last haven for dirty money that’s fueling Putin’s wars.’

Aaron David Miller, a now-retired veteran US diplomat, said on Twitter that Nuland’s comments were the ‘toughest battering of Israeli policy since crisis began or of any policy in very long while.’

Israel, founded as a haven for Jews in the wake of the Holocaust, grants automatic citizenship to anyone of Jewish descent.

Since the disintegration of the Soviet Union 30 years ago, an estimated one million Jews from Russia and other former Soviet republics have moved to Israel.

In recent years, a growing number of tycoons from the former Soviet Union have joined them.

Some, such as former energy magnate Leonid Nevzlin, came after falling out with Putin. Others appeared to have done so as hedges against trouble abroad.

Abramovich, for instance, took Israeli citizenship in 2018 after his British visa was not renewed, apparently as part of British authorities’ efforts to crack down on Putin associates after a former Russian spy was poisoned in England.

Although he appears to spend little time in the country, he has bought some choice real estate, including a home in a trendy Tel Aviv neighborhood reportedly purchased from the husband of Wonder Woman actress Gal Gadot.

Some of the tycoons have kept low public profiles, while others have embraced their Jewish roots, emerging as major philanthropists to Jewish causes or investing in Israel’s high-flying technology sector.

UK govt tells Chelsea fans: stop chanting Abramovich’s name 

Blues supporters again expressed their backing for Abramovich during Sunday’s home victory against Newcastle, after he was sanctioned by the British government last week as part of its response to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

Abramovich’s assets were frozen, with Chelsea placed under a special license which allows them to operate but unable to generate new revenue.

The billionaire, described by the UK government as part of Russian President Vladimir Putin’s inner circle, has brought unprecedented success to Chelsea since he bought the club in 2003.

But Johnson’s spokesman said it was time for the chanting to stop.

‘We recognize the strength of feeling around people’s clubs but that does not excuse behavior which is completely inappropriate at this time,’ he said.

‘I think people can show passion and support for their club without resorting to that sort of stuff.’

Abramovich put the Premier League club up for sale on March 2 and a number of interested parties are understood to remain in the frame despite the imposition of sanctions.

These include British billionaire Nick Candy, a consortium featuring Los Angeles Dodgers part-owner Todd Boehly and Swiss billionaire Hansjoerg Wyss, plus interest from former Liverpool chairman Martin Broughton.

The government has said it is still ‘open’ to Chelsea being sold but that a new application would be needed to enable a sale.

So far, the prime minister’s spokesman said, the club had not applied for a variation to its strict special license.

The government will oversee the sale process to ensure there is no benefit to Abramovich, with New York merchant bank the Raine Group handling the process.

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With a limited number of places to go, a growing number of Jewish tycoons, especially those with Israeli citizenship, could find themselves spending more time in Israel.

Israeli media have reported private jets belonging to oligarchs coming in and out of the country in recent days. Channel 12 said late Sunday that one of Abramovich’s planes had arrived, though it was unclear if he was onboard.

The billionaire owner of the Chelsea football club and the others are being added to a list of individuals whose assets in the EU – including superyachts and mansions – can be seized and entry into the bloc refused, three diplomats told AFP on Monday.

They are part of a fourth round of EU sanctions against Russia, the details of which were expected to be published later Monday.

The EU’s move follows that of Britain and Canada, which last week put Abramovich on their own sanctions lists. London’s decision put Abramovich’s hastily attempted sale of Chelsea – announced March 2 – on ice.

According to one of the EU diplomats, the stated reason for sanctioning Abramovich was because he ‘is a Russian oligarch who has long and close ties to [Russian President] Vladimir Putin,’ to whom he has ‘privileged access’.

He is seen as providing ‘a substantial source of revenue’ to Russia’s government.

On the weekend, Abramovich’s 460-foot-long superyacht Solaris was spotted arriving at a port in Montenegro, which is not part of the EU but has ambitions to join it. The vessel left the Spanish port of Barcelona days earlier.

Abramovich, 55, has a fortune worth $12.4 billion, according to Forbes magazine, and is rumored to own half a dozen yachts. He has also acquired Portuguese and Israeli nationalities.

European Commission chief Ursula von der Leyen last Friday, after an EU summit in France, heralded the latest round of sanctions agreed with partner nations, saying it will ‘further isolate Russia and drain the resources it uses to finance this barbaric war’.

Her trade commissioner, Valdis Dombrovskis, said on Monday: ‘There’s no one untouchable as you’ll see.’

‘This list of oligarchs is continuously being expanded – not only oligarchs, [but] also high level … state and military officials of Russia,’ Dombrovskis said.

He added that Russians deemed to be ‘actively involved in Russia’s propaganda machine’ were also on the list.

The EU’s foreign policy chief Josep Borrell said during a visit to North Macedonia that ‘this will be another major blow’ to Russia’s economy.

Russia’s gross domestic product is forecast to shrink dramatically under the successive rounds of sanctions imposed by the EU and US and their allies, which target the Russian central bank and companies including airlines.

While Israel weighs its moves, Jewish organizations already are taking a closer look at their relations with Russian oligarchs.

People hold placards as they take part in a protest against the Russian invasion of Ukraine, outside Israel’s governments office in Tel Aviv

People chant slogans during a protest against Russia’s military invasion of Ukraine

Israel on March 12 denied allegations it urged Kyiv to accept Moscow-proposed terms as part of the Jewish state’s mediation efforts to end the conflict in Ukraine

Last week, Yad Vashem, Israel’s national Holocaust memorial, said it was suspending a reported donation of tens millions of dollars from Abramovich ‘in light of recent developments.’

In Ukraine, the Babyn Yar Holocaust Memorial Center, built at the ravine where over 30,000 Jews were massacred in just two days in 1941, said that Fridman, who was born in Ukraine, had resigned from its advisory board due to the sanctions.

Lior Haiat, spokesman for Israel’s Foreign Ministry, said the government has formed a special inter-ministerial committee to study the sanctions issue.

The fate of affected oligarchs is a central part of that mission.

On Monday, Lapid said the ministry was working with other government bodies, including Israel’s Central Bank, to make sure tycoons do not use the country to avert sanctions.

Lapid also has advised his colleagues to keep their distance from the oligarchs.

‘You have to be very careful because those guys have connections and they can call you on the phone and ask you for things,’ Lapid recently told the Cabinet.

‘Don’t commit to anything because it could cause diplomatic damage. Say you can’t help them and give them the number of the Foreign Ministry.’

His comments, first reported in Israeli media, were confirmed by officials who attended the meeting.

They spoke on condition of anonymity because they were discussing closed Cabinet proceedings.

Israel, one of the few countries that has good relations with both Russia and Ukraine, may be able to insulate itself from the international pressure as long as it continues to mediate between the warring sides.

Joining the sanctions would risk drawing Russian ire and jeopardize Israel’s unique role.

Ksenia Svetlova, an international-affairs expert and former Israeli lawmaker born in Russia, said Israel would hold out from taking a stance as long as possible.

‘It depends on what kind of pressure they will exercise against Israel,’ she said. ‘Not voluntarily, certainly.’

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