Business Standard

Who’s an oligarch? Rich Russians fret over US sanctions label

- BLOOMBERG

When Debevoise & Plimpton lawyers held a seminar in Moscow to explain the impact of new US sanctions legislatio­n, they had to rent out a hall in a hotel to hold all the worried clients who signed up.

A big reason for the interest is a provision in the law that gives President Donald Trump’s executive branch until February to identify “oligarchs” close to Vladimir Putin who can be slapped with visa bans and asset freezes as further punishment for Kremlin election meddling.

With the Treasury Department, which is leading the effort, giving little indication of how the list is being compiled, Russia’s billionair­e class is in the throes of a kind of helpless anxiety. One of the country’s richest men said it would be stupid to try to lobby against inclusion in Washington because that would only put a bigger target on his back.

Being classified an oligarch by the US won’t automatica­lly trigger the kind of penalties that have already been imposed on dozens of Russian insiders and state companies over both the election issue and Ukraine. But the threat alone is enough to damage the commercial prospects of an almost unlimited number of Russians, according to Alan Kartashkin, a Debevoise partner in Moscow.

“It could be an endless list,’’ Kartashkin said. “If you’re a Russian oligarch, you don’t want to be on it,” he added. Several billionair­es with varying degrees of political clout said they’re alarmed by the possibilit­y of being singled out and are peppering their US lawyers and lobbyists with queries about what they can do if they are. The answer: nothing.

An executive at a major US law firm said that all of his major Russian clients are worried about the blacklist and that he fears he’ll be forced to stop representi­ng any who are included. Even some non-billionair­es who are no longer close to the Kremlin say they’re feeling the squeeze. The US law, which Trump grudgingly signed on August 2 after it passed Congress with a veto-proof margin, instructs the Treasury, together with the State Department and intelligen­ce agencies, to identify officials and oligarchs as determined by “their closeness to the Russian regime and their net worth.”

The report, due within 180 days of the law’s signing, must include “indices of corruption with respect to those individual­s” and any foreign assets they may have.

 ??  ?? US is in the process of identifyin­g “oligarchs” close to Vladimir Putin who can be slapped with visa bans
US is in the process of identifyin­g “oligarchs” close to Vladimir Putin who can be slapped with visa bans

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