RBC: Norwegians refused to provide fuel for the yacht of the ex-general director of Norilsk Nickel

RBC: Norwegians refused to provide fuel for the yacht of the ex-general director of Norilsk Nickel

THIS MESSAGE (MATERIAL) IS CREATED AND (OR) DISTRIBUTED BY A FOREIGN MASS MEDIA PERFORMING THE FUNCTIONS OF A FOREIGN AGENT AND (OR) A RUSSIAN LEGAL ENTITY PERFORMING THE FUNCTIONS OF A FOREIGN AGENT.

The Ragnar yacht, owned by Russian manager and official, former Norilsk Nickel CEO Vladimir Strzhalkovsky, cannot leave Narvik, Norway – local suppliers refuse to provide fuel to the ship, RBC reports citing the Norwegian Broadcasting Corporation.

Strzhalkovsky is a colleague of Vladimir Putin in the KGB, previously served as Deputy Minister for Physical Culture, Sports and Tourism and Deputy Minister for Economic Development and Trade, and headed the Federal Tourism Agency.

On the eve it became known that the Croatian authorities arrested three yachts, the owners of which may be associated with Russians from the EU sanctions lists.

And on March 3, the French authorities announced the detention of a yacht “connected” with the head of Rosneft, Igor Sechin.

Sanctions against Russian businessmen and officials were introduced by Western countries because of the military special operation of the Russian Federation in Ukraine.

Recall that on February 21, 2022, Russian President Vladimir Putin signed decrees recognizing the independence of the self-proclaimed Donetsk and Luhansk People’s Republics (DPR and LPR), and on February 24 he made an emergency appeal to the Russians and announced a special military operation in Donbass. In his speech, he stated that “circumstances require decisive action from Russia” and stressed that “Russia will not allow Ukraine to have nuclear weapons.”

In response to Russia’s actions, Western countries (USA, Canada, European Union, Great Britain, Japan) announced new, tougher sanctions against the Russian Federation, including financial and economic ones.

Thus, in particular, Russian banks fell under the sanctions, including Sberbank, VTB, Novikombank, FC Otkritie and Sovcombank, and for a number of state-owned companies it was difficult to attract foreign capital.

Later, the EU countries and the United States agreed to disconnect Russian banks that fell under sanctions from the international system of interbank transactions and information exchange SWIFT. In addition, it was decided to freeze the assets of the Bank of Russia, which will create difficulties for its use of international reserves. EU countries also pledged to take steps to limit the sale of citizenship — the so-called “golden passports” that allow wealthy Russians connected to the Russian government to become citizens of EU states and gain access to their financial systems. In addition, the European Union, the United States, Canada and a number of other countries have closed the sky for Russian aircraft.

You can follow the chronicle of events around Ukraine here.

Source: Rosbalt

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