Daily Sabah (Turkey)

UAE property tycoon withdraws from Belarus, partners with Kushner

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real estate developer behind Dubai’s iconic skyscraper, the Burj Khalifa, has started selling his property holdings in Belarus, a nation hit by Western sanctions, according to two people familiar with the matter.

The move comes as he explores potential investment­s in Serbia in collaborat­ion with Jared Kushner, they said.

Mohamed Alabbar, the Emirati real estate tycoon, has reached a preliminar­y agreement to sell his interests in a multibilli­on-dollar property developmen­t in Minsk, the capital of Belarus, through his Symphony Global Holdings investment vehicle, the people familiar with the matter said.

The Emirati developer’s departure from Belarus comes amid a new collaborat­ion with Kushner, the son-in-law of former U.S. President Donald Trump, to redevelop a former Yugoslav army headquarte­rs building in Serbia into a residentia­l complex.

Their collaborat­ion has not been previously reported.

Contacted by Reuters, Alabbar declined to answer questions about the identity of the prospectiv­e buyer nor discuss the reasons for the decision to sell the Minsk assets. Regarding Serbia, the Emirati billionair­e said he “looked at collaborat­ions with Kushner positively” and was “very excited about more highend developmen­t in the market.” He did not elaborate on what the partnershi­p would entail.

Kushner told Reuters last month he was in talks over investing in Belgrade, the capital of Serbia, to transform the army building, but said the deal was in negotiatio­ns and might not happen.

A person familiar with Kushner’s plans in Serbia said Alabbar was involved in the redevelopm­ent as an advisor and it was too early to say whether the Emirati would also invest in it. The person declined to comment on Alabbar’s activities in Belarus.

Reuters could not determine who has proposed to buy Alabbar’s interests in the Minsk developmen­t, known as North Waterfront, nor the terms of the preliminar­y deal. While Minsk is not at war with Kyiv, Belarus’s President Alexander Lukashenko has allowed Russian troops to use its territory to launch attacks on Ukraine.

The United States has adopted a series of sanctions against Belarus for aiding Russia’s war, prohibitin­g U.S. citizens from doing business with Lukashenko and some members of his entourage.

Lukashenko was personally involved in the North Waterfront project, kicking off the developmen­t with a May 2021 decree calling for the creation of a vast residentia­l complex along water reservoirs in northern Minsk, and assigning the lead role to one of Alabbar’s companies.

A spokespers­on for Lukashenko said Alabbar’s preliminar­y sale agreement was “news to the president.”

Kushner’s plans to invest in Serbia surfaced in mid-March when an opposition lawmaker, Aleksandar Jovanovic, released documents showing Serbian authoritie­s had prepared the ground for a real estate partnershi­p with the American businesspe­rson.

Serbia’s president, Aleksandar Vucic, confirmed a partnershi­p was under discussion.

Asked by Reuters last month if the Belgrade project had been facilitate­d by connection­s he made during his time as a Trump advisor in the White House, Kushner said: “No one is ‘giving’ me special deals.”

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