The Daily Telegraph

Ex-wife to land yacht in £450m divorce

High Court rules on latest round in long legal fight between Russian mogul and divorcee owed £453m

- By Yohannes Lowe

A High Court judge has cleared the way for a divorcee owed more than £450 million by her Russian billionair­e ex-husband to be awarded his superyacht and art collection, in the latest round of a long-running legal dispute. The ruling was made after Tatiana Akhmedova, who lives in London, was awarded a 41.5 per cent share of businessma­n Farkhad Akhmedov’s £1 billion-plus fortune by a British judge in 2016 but she has so far only received about £5 million.

A HIGH Court judge has cleared the way for a divorcee owed more than £450million by her Russian billionair­e ex-husband to be awarded his superyacht and art collection, in the latest round of a long-running legal dispute.

Tatiana Akhmedova, who lives in London, was awarded a 41.5 per cent share of businessma­n Farkhad Akhmedov’s £1billion-plus fortune by a British judge in late 2016.

She has argued that Mr Akhmedov has yet to hand over the vast majority of the £453 million Mr Justice Haddoncave, who analysed the case at a trial in the Family Division of the High Court in London, said she should get.

Judges have heard that she has so far been given only about £5million and that Mr Akhmedov has not “voluntaril­y” paid a penny.

The billionair­e oil and gas tycoon believes the decision should not have been made by a British judge because his ex-wife is from eastern Europe and the couple were not married in this country. Ms Akhmedova claims he has attempted to place assets beyond her reach and has taken legal action in Britain and overseas to get hold of what she is owed.

This has led to her becoming embroiled in litigation with a number of trusts based in Liechtenst­ein, into which Mr Akhmedov has transferre­d assets.

Mrs Justice Gwynneth Knowles was told how Mr Akhmedov had transferre­d a superyacht, the Luna, worth around £340million, and an art collection, with an estimated worth of £110million, into the ownership of a number of trusts in the central European country. Trustees had asked her to release them from their “obligation­s to execute transfers”, arguing that orders telling them to transfer the yacht and art collection would “require” them to act in “violation of the law of Liechtenst­ein”.

The judge analysed arguments at virtual hearings in the Family Division of the High Court in June and published a ruling yesterday in which their applicatio­n was refused.

Trustees of two Liechtenst­ein trusts, into which Mr Akhmedov had transferre­d “monetary assets”, had also said proceeding­s brought against them in London by Ms Akhmedova should be halted and dismissed. Mrs Justice Knowles also denied those applicatio­ns. The £453 million Mr Justice Haddon-cave awarded Ms Akhmedova is thought to be the biggest award made by a divorce court judge in England.

He said Ms Akhmedova had been a British citizen since 2000. She had been a housewife and mother to the couple’s now grown-up sons.

Ms Akhmedova has also taken legal action against her 26-year-old son Temur, who she says is his father’s “lieutenant”. Temur, a London trader, disputes allegation­s made against him.

 ??  ?? Russian billionair­e Farkhad Akhmedov and his London-based former wife Tatiana
Russian billionair­e Farkhad Akhmedov and his London-based former wife Tatiana
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