Chronicle (Zimbabwe)

Abramovich seeks Israeli citizenshi­p

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He will join another new face in Liverpool’s midfield next term, with Guinea internatio­nal Naby Keita moving to Merseyside from RB Leipzig on 1 July.

Liverpool have wasted no time after the disappoint­ment of the Champions League final defeat by Real Madrid.

The arrival of the coveted Fabinho is not simply a required replacemen­t for Emre Can, who will join Juventus, but provides a quality, solid midfield base to complement the arrival of Naby Keita from RB Leipzig.

Liverpool have ended the season empty-handed but the feeling progress will be enhanced by such a swift statement of intent in the transfer market.

It lifts at least some of the gloom from Saturday’s loss in Kiev.

And it will not stop with Fabinho. Klopp is determined to add to a squad whose limitation­s were exposed by injuries and lack of strength beyond the first-choice 11 against Real.

Fabinho’s arrival is the first sign that Klopp will not allow the grass to grow under Liverpool’s feet as he tries to claim his first trophy with them when he starts his third full season at Anfield in August.— BBC. CHELSEA owner Roman Abramovich has flown to Israel in order to seek citizenshi­p amid ongoing delays in the process of renewing his UK visa, the country’s interior ministry confirmed.

The Russian billionair­e flew to Tel Aviv on Monday after receiving confirmati­on that he was eligible for Israeli citizenshi­p under the Law of Return, which allows Jews to become citizens of the country.

A spokespers­on for the Nativ Liaison Bureau, which facilitate­s immigratio­n to Israel from Russian-speaking countries, told Channel 10 news: “Roman Abramovich arrived at the Israeli embassy in Moscow like any other person.

“He filed a request to receive an immigratio­n permit, his documents were checked according to the Law of Return, and he was indeed found eligible.”

The move has not been confirmed by Abramovich’s Moscow-based spokesman John Mann, while Chelsea declined a request from ESPN FC to comment.

The Tier 1 investor visa that Abramovich has used to visit London regularly in recent years expired in April, and has yet to be renewed amid reports that UK authoritie­s had demanded that he declare the source of his vast fortune as political tensions with Russia escalate.

Abramovich returned to Russia when his UK visa expired, meaning he could not be present to see Chelsea lift the FA Cup for the eighth time in the club’s history with a 1-0 victory against Manchester United at Wembley last weekend.

Israeli passport-holders are permitted to enter the UK without a visa for short stays, though it is not yet clear whether this was the primary motive for Abramovich’s decision. He has been a frequent visitor to Israel and in 2015 bought a hotel in Tel Aviv that he has reportedly now turned into a residence.

Worth an estimated £9.3 billion, according to the Sunday Times, Abramovich would become the richest person in Israel and would be exempt from the country’s taxes on income earned abroad for 10 years, as well as not being required to declare the source of that income.

Abramovich’s visa situation — first reported in the Financial Times — comes at a time of heightened tensions between the UK government and Russia following the poisoning of former spy Sergei Skripal and his daughter Yulia in Salisbury back in March, as well as allegation­s of illegal Russian interferen­ce in the lead-up to the Brexit referendum vote.

Having amassed a huge and controvers­ial personal fortune through dealings in the Russian oil industry in the 1990s, Abramovich acquired Chelsea in June 2003 and has invested well in excess of £1 billion in the club, bankrollin­g a 15-year run that has brought 15 major trophies to Stamford Bridge.—ESPNFC.

 ??  ?? Roman Abramovich
Roman Abramovich
 ??  ?? Fabinho
Fabinho

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