UK PM warns Abramovich 'clock is ticking' over Chelsea sale fund
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British Prime Minister Keir Starmer on Wednesday warned former Chelsea owner Roman Abramovich "the clock is ticking" over the frozen £2.5 billion generated from the sale of the club, which has been earmarked to help Ukraine's war victims.
Speaking
in parliament, Starmer told Abramovich: "Honour the commitment you made
and pay up now, and if you don't, we are prepared to go to court so every penny
reaches those whose lives have been torn apart by Putin's illegal war."
Ministers
in June said they were "frustrated" by the failure to reach agreement
with Abramovich over where the funds of the May 2022 sale should go.
The UK
government wants the funds to be directed towards humanitarian purposes in
Ukraine, but the oligarch insists they be used for all victims of the conflict,
including in Russia.
A
consortium led by US businessman Todd Boehly bought the Premier League giants
after Abramovich was sanctioned following Russian President Vladimir Putin's
invasion of Ukraine.
The
frozen funds are being held in a UK bank account.
They
still legally belong to Abramovich and cannot be moved without a licence from
the Office of Financial Sanctions Implementation.
But
Starmer told lawmakers Wednesday that the government was now issuing such a
licence.
"I
can announce that we're issuing a licence to transfer £2.5 billion from the
sale of Chelsea Football Club that's been frozen... since 2022," he said.
"My
message to Abramovich is this: the clock is ticking," the prime minister
added.
The
59-year-old Russian-Israeli billionaire bought the club in 2003 and had an
estimated fortune of $14.5 billion in 2021.
Chelsea
enjoyed their most successful ever period under Abramovich, winning two
Champions Leagues, five Premier Leagues, five FA Cups, two Europa Leagues and a
Club World Cup.

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