Las Vegas Review-Journal

Chechen leader has more interactio­ns with UFC fighters amid US sanctions

- By Karim Zidan and Kevin Draper

As the war in Ukraine heads into winter, Ramzan Kadyrov, one of the closest allies of Russian President Vladimir Putin’s, is gaining more visibility and propagandi­st fodder through his connection­s with UFC fighters and others in mixed martial arts.

And although the UFC as a company has repeatedly said its business has no connection­s to Kadyrov and that it follows all laws, government officials in the United States say they are aware of the apparent ties between UFC athletes and Kadyrov, the strongman leader of Chechnya, who faces severe legal restrictio­ns.

Kadyrov has supplied soldiers to support the Russian forces fighting in Ukraine and has been one of the most hawkish cheerleade­rs of the invasion, at one point calling on Putin to use a low-yield nuclear weapon against Ukraine. Kadyrov also owns several businesses tied to MMA that have been restricted by the Treasury Department for U.S. citizens and others looking to do business in the United States. The businesses include Akhmat MMA, a gym that trains and sponsors fighters, and the restrictio­ns also keep people from doing business with Kadyrov.

Still, the main event for UFC 282 last Saturday featured Magomed Ankalaev, who has been sponsored by Akhmat for nearly his whole career, competing for the light heavyweigh­t championsh­ip.

Neither Ankalaev nor his opponent took the belt after a rare split draw. Still, the bout was the latest in a string of recent moments that have linked UFC personalit­ies with Kadyrov and people in his orbit.

Last month, three former UFC champions visited Chechnya at the behest of Kadyrov, who was first rebuked with Treasury sanctions in 2017 and accused of a wide range of human rights abuses, including kidnapping, torturing and killing LGBTQ people in Chechnya. Kadyrov was given additional sanctions related to the war in September, as were his wives and adult children.

Former UFC welterweig­ht champion Kamaru Usman, former flyweight champion Henry Cejudo and former interim lightweigh­t champion Justin Gaethje were pictured in November testing out grenade launchers and assault rifles at the Russian Special Forces University in Chechnya. The facility is used to train Russia’s special-forces units, including those participat­ing in the war.

Usman, Gaethje and Cejudo also attended a birthday party for one of Kadyrov’s teenage sons. For Usman, it was the third time he had visited Chechnya since 2020 and the second time since the Treasury Department imposed sanctions directly on Kadyrov’s MMA businesses.

Some Chechen MMA fighters, such as breakout UFC star Khamzat Chimaev, also have extensive ties to Kadyrov.

Ali Abdelaziz, an agent who represents Usman, Gaethje, Cejudo and Ankalaev, among many other fighters, did not respond to messages seeking comment. Neither did an agent for Chimaev.

On Twitter on Sunday, Gaethje said he had never met Kadyrov but acknowledg­ed his trip to Chechnya. “Went for the kids’ birthday party,” he said. “I also like to shoot guns.”

The sanctions, which are broad, are generally designed to discourage people from taking actions that will benefit those facing restrictio­ns financiall­y or in other ways. Simple interactio­ns could be subject to harsh penalties.

A State Department official familiar with the investigat­ions of Kadyrov’s business dealings said in a statement, “The Department of State is aware of Kadyrov’s associatio­n with Chechen UFC fighters.” The official was not authorized to publicly discuss the applicatio­n of the Treasury sanctions and shared the

In a statement, the UFC said it had “no contractua­l relationsh­ip or any commercial dealings with Ramzan Kadyrov” or anybody affiliated with him. It added that the more than 600 fighters from more than 70 countries were independen­t contractor­s, “who have control over many aspects of their careers, including where they train or where they live when not competing.”

statement on the condition of anonymity. Although the State Department had previously noted Kadyrov’s ties within combat sports, the statement is its first direct mention of athletes with the UFC having ties to Kadyrov.

In October, at UFC 280, which was held in the United Arab Emirates, Chimaev sat cageside along with two of Kadyrov’s teenage sons, who are minors and not among Kadyrov’s children who have been named in the sanctions. Chimaev and one of the boys, who is 14, posed for a photograph with UFC President Dana White. The image later appeared on an Instagram account associated with Kadyrov, who has long used similar photograph­s to burnish his reputation.

In a statement, the UFC said it had “no contractua­l relationsh­ip or any commercial dealings with Ramzan Kadyrov” or anybody affiliated with him. It added that the more than 600 fighters from more than 70 countries were independen­t contractor­s, “who have control over many aspects of their careers, including where they train or where they live when not competing.”

The UFC has, at times, told fighters not to work or be affiliated with certain people or businesses. Recently, the UFC barred fighters from working with a gym and a coach because of investigat­ions in at least two U.S. states and in Canada of suspicious betting patterns.

Shahroo Yazdani, a lawyer at Washington-based firm Price Benowitz who specialize­s in Treasury sanctions, noted that a news release announcing the latest sanctions against Kadyrov specifical­ly mentioned his associatio­n with MMA and how he has recruited fighters for the war in Ukraine through his MMA clubs.

“With that specifical­ly noted in the designatio­n, it’s going to be very interestin­g to see what happens with his MMA associates,” Yazdani said. “We may well see more fighters stopped at airports and potentiall­y even more designatio­ns related to those working with his MMA club.”

After UFC 280, Chimaev scuffled with a fighter who is the cousin of former UFC lightweigh­t champion Khabib Nurmagomed­ov. Kadyrov later posted a screenshot on Instagram of a video call with both fighters and proclaimed that he had resolved the “misunderst­anding” between them.

“I have made sure of it personally,” Kadyrov said in the caption on his post.

Abuzayed Vismuradov, a colonel for Kadyrov’s militia who is considered to be one of the most powerful men in Chechnya and who operates Akhmat MMA, posted a video on Instagram with the fighters showing that the conflict had been resolved.

Also in the video was the retired champion Nurmagomed­ov, as well as Islam Makhachev — who had captured the lightweigh­t title at UFC 280. In front of the men, a UFC belt was propped up on a table.

“The dogs bark, the caravan moves on,” Vismuradov said in a caption in the video in which he also praised Kadyrov directly and closed with the battle slogan for Kadyrov loyalists: “Akhmat Power.”

In 2019, Vismuradov received sanctions from the U.S. Treasury Department, which said he “was in charge of an operation that illegally detained and tortured individual­s on the basis of their actual or perceived LGBTI status.”

Chimaev, a Chechen-born Swedish resident who trains at Allstars Training Center in Stockholm, has maintained a well-publicized relationsh­ip with Kadyrov since joining the UFC in 2020. On Sunday, Chimaev posted a video on Instagram of a training montage alongside Kadyrov’s teenage sons and members of his Allstars team in Dubai. The video was reposted by the account affiliated with Kadyrov, and both were captioned with the “Akhmat Power” slogan.

Chimaev’s two most recent fights have taken place in the United States, and Ankalaev appeared to have been in the country for more than a month before his bout Saturday. However, some Akhmat MMA fighters have struggled to secure U.S. visas in the past few months, a potential sign of difficulti­es the UFC could face if the U.S. government increases its pressure.

Maxim Grishin, a Russian-born Akhmat MMA fighter, was scheduled to fight Nov. 5 in Las Vegas, but his bout was abruptly canceled just days before. Grishin said in an interview with a Russian news outlet that he struggled to secure a visa.

Grishin said he did not believe his affiliatio­n with Kadyrov led to his travel difficulti­es, but he also revealed that he was advised not to publicize their friendly relationsh­ip.

“I was told that it is better not to associate myself with the Akhmat Fight Club, which I am a representa­tive of,” Grishin told Match TV in an interview that was also picked up by Russia Today, the country’s state-controlled English-language news outlet. “But this is not just a contract, we have brotherly relations. I considered it cowardly. Sport is separate from politics, why should I hide something? I don’t do anything bad to the universe, why should the universe do bad things to me?”

The UFC declined to answer questions about Grishin. Asked about denials of visas to Russian nationals, a State Department spokespers­on said that visa records were confidenti­al and that by law it could not provide details about individual visas.

In September, the State Department announced visa restrictio­ns against 910 Russians in response to the invasion of Ukraine, as well as sanctions against other key Russian officials.

“We will hold to account any individual, entity, or country that provides political or economic support for Russia’s illegal attempts to change the status of Ukrainian territory,” Secretary of State Antony Blinken said in the announceme­nt.

 ?? SERGEY PONOMAREV / NEW YORK TIMES FILE (2015) ?? Ramzan Kadyrov, front, celebrates during a mixed martial arts tournament March 15, 2015, in Grozny, Russia. As the war in Ukraine heads into winter, Kadyrov, one of Vladimir Putin’s closest allies, is gaining more visibility and propagandi­st fodder through his connection­s with UFC fighters and others in mixed martial arts.
SERGEY PONOMAREV / NEW YORK TIMES FILE (2015) Ramzan Kadyrov, front, celebrates during a mixed martial arts tournament March 15, 2015, in Grozny, Russia. As the war in Ukraine heads into winter, Kadyrov, one of Vladimir Putin’s closest allies, is gaining more visibility and propagandi­st fodder through his connection­s with UFC fighters and others in mixed martial arts.
 ?? JOHN LOCHER / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Magomed Ankalaev kicks Jan Blachowicz during a UFC 282 mixed martial arts light heavyweigh­t title bout Saturday in Las Vegas.
JOHN LOCHER / ASSOCIATED PRESS Magomed Ankalaev kicks Jan Blachowicz during a UFC 282 mixed martial arts light heavyweigh­t title bout Saturday in Las Vegas.

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