On the Nov 8, 2018 the Jersey Evening Post (https://jerseyeveningpost.com/news/2018/11/08/trump-sanctions-prompt-exit-of-russian-owned-businesses/) reported a story about Oleg Deripaska, a Russian oligarch and his company
- SANCTIONS imposed by the Trump administration have caused two Jersey-based businesses owned by one of Russia’s richest men to press ahead with plans to leave the Island.
- It went on to say “According to announcements from both the Hong Kong and London Stock Exchanges, Rusal – the world’s second-largest aluminium producer – and EN+ Group – a supplier of natural resources – are both now due to be registered in Russia. They are currently registered at the headquarters of Intertrust at 44 Esplanade.
- The two companies are controlled by Oleg Deripaska, a Russian oligarch who is valued at $3.3 billion and has close ties to his country’s president, Vladimir Putin.”
However, before this time the House of Commons Foreign Affairs Committee published on 28 March 2018 Oral evidence: Russian Corruption and the UK, HC 932. Members present:
- Tom Tugendhat (Chair); Ian Austin; Chris Bryant; Ann Clwyd; Mike Gapes; Ian Murray; Priti Patel; Andrew Rosindell; Mr Bob Seely; Royston Smith.
- Witnesses
- I: Oliver Bullough, Journalist and Author on Russia; Juliette Garside, Financial Correspondent; Luke Harding, Journalist and Author on Russia; and Tom Keatinge, Director, Centre for Financial Crime and Security Studies, RUSI.
- II: Vladimir Ashurkov, Executive Director, Anti-Corruption Foundation; and Roman Borisovich, Co-founder, ClampK.
- Examination of witnesses
- Witnesses: Oliver Bullough, Juliette Garside, Luke Harding and Tom Keatinge.
Watch the meeting https://www.parliamentlive.tv/Event/Index/82f6d3cc-c0bf-425a-8af2-fc01fee8053d
This meeting has now been following by a report by the UK Foreign Affairs Select Committee raised several concerns about sanctions and specifically questioned how the Russian company, EN+ Group, was allowed to list in 2017 given it was owned by a suspected “Kremlin associate” Oleg Deripaska. The report is titled
- Fragmented and incoherent: the UK’s sanctions policy – https://publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm201719/cmselect/cmfaff/1703/170302.htm
This report follows
- Moscow’s Gold: Russian corruption in the UKreport, https://publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm201719/cmselect/cmfaff/932/932.pdf (Moscow gold)
The Moscow Gold report used testament from a Foreign Affairs Committee meeting [Oral evidence] on Russian Corruption and the UK, HC 932 (Russian corruption)
In this report [Moscow gold] and the house of commons minutes on Russian corruption it is noted:-
- Deripaska was not subject to sanctions at the time of the En+ IPO, his proximity to the Kremlin was well known; Roman Borisovich, for example, noted that Deripaska had been asked to build the international airport in Sochi for the 2014 Winter Olympics. In Q96 http://data.parliament.uk/writtenevidence/committeeevidence.svc/evidencedocument/foreign-affairs-committee/russian-corruption-and-the-uk/oral/81007.html)
- In Q117 – http://data.parliament.uk/writtenevidence/committeeevidence.svc/evidencedocument/foreign-affairs-committee/russian-corruption-and-the-uk/oral/81007.html]
- Chris Bryant asks:
- From your experience of dealing with British businesses that have had to do business in Russia, has the Bribery Act made it more difficult for them?
- Vladimir Ashurkov: Executive Director, Anti-Corruption Foundation; and Roman Borisovich, Co-founder, ClampK.
- Probably yes, superficially. But that’s the irony—from talking to different anti-corruption practitioners in the UK, from our own experience, it seems like the Serious Fraud Office is more interested in prosecuting a British company that is bribing some Government official, rather than someone like Russian oligarch Oleg Deripaska who is in a corrupt relationship with the Russian Government.
- At the same time, Mr Deripaska owns property in London, he is a majority shareholder of a company that is quoted on the London Stock Exchange, and he was the chief executive officer of that company, so there is clearly British [connection]
- In Qq161–162 http://data.parliament.uk/writtenevidence/committeeevidence.svc/evidencedocument/foreign-affairs-committee/russian-corruption-and-the-uk/oral/81007.html]
- Mike Gapes:
- This was public knowledge. None of these things were secret, so why did the regulator not stop it?
- Emile Simpson:
- That is a good question for the regulator.
- Mike Gapes:
- What do we need to do to ensure that things like this do not happen again?
- Emile Simpson:
- I think there needs to be an investigation into what processes failed in the regulator. There needs to be a look at the regulator’s code.
- Mike Gapes:
- Chris Bryant asks:
The latest report Fragmented and incoherent: the UK’s sanctions policy – https://publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm201719/cmselect/cmfaff/1703/170302.htm urges the UK government to carry out a “major review” of its approach to sanctions, the Select Committee stated:
- “The Foreign & Commonwealth Office also seems unwilling to acknowledge that it has a vital role to play in helping to keep the UK and our allies safe by cracking down on the laundering of dirty money.
- As this Committee has said in previous reports, dirty money is a national security issue, especially in the light of London’s importance in the global financial system.
- It is simply not good enough for the Minister of State to assert that financial crime is ‘not quite’ the Foreign & Commonwealth Office’s ‘patch'”.
In closing and keeping focused on the question,
- Should Jersey ask the same questions about its AML and sanction regimes after the EN+ Group issue in 2018?