Friday, March 18, 2022

Pity the Poor Russian Oligarchs

A 223-foot (68-metre) luxury yacht owned by a former KGB agent and longtime acquaintance of Vladimir Putin is currently stranded at a Norwegian port after locals’ persistent refusal to sell it fuel.

The vessel, called Ragnar, an old norse word meaning “warrior”, is owned by Vladimir Strzhalkovsky, and its crew has been told by Norwegian fuel suppliers in the northern port of Narvik to “row home” or “raise the sails”. They say they will not refuel it because of the owner’s links to the Russian president.

The captain is trying to rely on the boat's flag of convenience to justify being able to fuel. Good luck with that.

2 comments:

  1. Or this folly, a 600 million dollar 3 masted schooner of sorts, the damndest thing with sails I ever saw
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A_(sailing_yacht)
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eINKxi4dVLo
    https://robbreport.com/motors/marine/russian-andrey-melnichenko-sailingyachta-seized-1234668478/
    Impounded by the Italian police in Trieste.
    ...sob, sniff....

    ReplyDelete
  2. How much have the oligrachs made off with (besides the yachts)? One estimate puts it at 20 trillion

    There's a fascinating Krugman in the NYT about how all the wealth that Russia's one remaining "success", extractive resource sales, has almost all been robbed and transferred out of the country by its kleptocratic oligarchs:

    Filip Novokmet, Thomas Piketty and Gabriel Zucman have pointed out that Russia has run huge trade surpluses every year since the early 1990s, which should have led to a large accumulation of overseas assets. Yet official statistics show Russia with only moderately more assets than liabilities abroad. How is that possible? The obvious explanation is that wealthy Russians have been skimming off large sums and parking them abroad.

    The sums involved are mind-boggling. Novokmet et al. estimate that in 2015 the hidden foreign wealth of rich Russians amounted to around 85 percent of Russia’s G.D.P. To give you some perspective, this is as if a U.S. president’s cronies had managed to hide $20 trillion in overseas accounts. Another paper co-written by Zucman found that in Russia, “the vast majority of wealth at the top is held offshore.” As far as I can tell, the overseas exposure of Russia’s elite has no precedent in history — and it creates a huge vulnerability that the West can exploit.

    https://www.nytimes.com/2022/02/24/opinion/russia-ukraine-sanctions-offshore-accounts.html

    ReplyDelete

House Rules #1, #2 and #6 apply to all comments. Rule #3 also applies to political comments.

In short, don't be a jackass. THIS MEANS YOU!
If you never see your comments posted, see Rule #7.

All comments must be on point and address either the points raised in the blog post or points raised by commenters in response.
Any comments that drift off onto other topics are subject to deletion.

(Please don't feed the trolls.)

中國詞不評論,冒抹除的風險。僅英語。

COMMENT MODERATION IS IN EFFECT UFN. This means that if you are an insulting dick, nobody will ever see it.