OLIGARCHI RUSSI

Putin, risolto il mistero dello yacht da 140 metri: ecco chi è il proprietario. a bordo c'è anche un sistema che distrugge i droni, lo scheherazade naviga sotto la bandiera delle isole cayman. the italian sea group: "c'è un contratto con un cliente russo non colpito dalle sanzioni".

Putin, risolto il mistero dello yacht da 140 metri: ecco chi è il proprietario. A bordo c'è anche un sistema che distrugge i droni

Lo yacht più grande del mondo, ormeggiato in Italia a Marina di Carrara, lungo 140 metri e del valore stimato in circa 700 milioni di dollari non apparterebbe al presidente Putin , come invece aveva fatto intendere il New York Times . Lo Scheherazade - così si chiama il mega yacht - è «al vaglio della polizia italiana». Il suo capitano, il britannico Guy Bennett-Pearce, ha riferito che gli inquirenti sono saliti a bordo venerdì scorso e ne hanno esaminato la documentazione ma The Italian Sea Group, la società di costruzione, smentisce che il proprietario sia il presidente russo: «In funzione della documentazione di cui dispone e a seguito di quanto emerso dai controlli effettuati dalle autorità competenti, lo yacht di 140 metri Scheherazade, attualmente in cantiere per attività di manutenzione, non è riconducibile alla proprietà del Presidente russo Vladimir Putin».

Oligarchi russi, chi sono le mogli dal patrimonio milionario: modelle o amiche di università, qualcuna dalle sanzioni ci ha guadagnato

Chi è il proprietario

Dunque chiunque abbia la fortuna di poter navigare su questo gioiello non sarebbe uno degli oligarchi russi colpiti dalle sanzioni avviate in seguito al conflitto in Ucraina. Tanto che The Italian Sea Group «conferma che la produzione delle commesse in progress e le attività di refit proseguono senza alcun rallentamento, nonostante le sanzioni introdotte dall'Unione Europea nei confronti della Russia. Alla data odierna, nessun ordine è stato cancellato e non si è manifestato alcun ritardo nei pagamenti degli Stati di Avanzamento Lavori contrattuali in essere. Si rammenta che TISG lavora esclusivamente su commessa per armatori con il supporto società di broker internazionali, con contratti che prevedono pagamenti anticipati relativi ai SAL, e in caso di inadempienza, è prevista in estrema ratio per il cliente la perdita degli acconti versati; nel merito, la proprietà della nave resterebbe di TISG, dando alla Società l'opportunità di rivendere immediatamente lo yacht e realizzare interessanti plusvalenze».

Com'è lo yacht

L'interno del yacht è progettato da Zuretti Yacht Design. E' in grado di ospitare almeno 18 ospiti e un crew di 40. Secondo quanto si legge sul sito Superyachtfan ha una piattaforma di atterraggio per elicotteri, una piscina con copertura a scomparsa che si trasforma in una pista da ballo, la palestra attrezzata e gli infissi dorati nei bagni. Oltre a un cinema e diverse aree di intrattenimento. Ha anche un sistema di crash dei droni, che letteralmente schianta i droni dall'aria.

Abramovich, lo yacht Solaris (da 600 milioni) attracca in un "rifugio sicuro" in Montenegro dopo 4 giorni di fuga

Il capitano della nave, Guy Bennett-Pearce, cittadino britannico, ha negato allo storico e prestigioso quotidiano di New York che Putin possedesse o fosse mai stato sullo yacht: «Non l'ho mai visto. Non l'ho mai incontrato». Ha aggiunto, in un’intervista telefonica dallo yacht, che il suo proprietario non era in nessuna lista di sanzioni. Non ha escluso che il proprietario potesse essere russo, ma non ha voluto fornire altri dettagli sulla sua identità, essendo vincolato a un accordo di riservatezza.

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Italy won't say who's paying for the care of a $700 million superyacht tied to Putin

Dustin Jones

yacht di putin prezzo

The Scheherazade, a 460-foot superyacht, has been held in Italy since May 2022 in response to Russia's invasion of Ukraine. It is believed to have ties to Russian President Vladimir Putin. Laura Lezza/Getty Images hide caption

The Scheherazade, a 460-foot superyacht, has been held in Italy since May 2022 in response to Russia's invasion of Ukraine. It is believed to have ties to Russian President Vladimir Putin.

The Scheherazade superyacht was impounded by the Italian government in May 2022 in response to Russian President Vladimir Putin's invasion of Ukraine. Instead of falling into disrepair, Italy has allowed its owner to maintain and refit the vessel, but it won't disclose who is footing the bill.

The Financial Times reported on Sunday that the vessel has been held at port in Marina di Carrara, located almost 90 miles northwest of Florence, since it was impounded by authorities in the spring of 2022. For over a year, the Italian government has permitted the owner to continue paying for the ship's staff, its maintenance and refitting of the vessel. But Italy won't identify the owner.

Italy's Finance Ministry said in a May 2022 news release that the superyacht had "significant economic and business links" with "prominent elements of the Russian government" but didn't name the owner of the ship.

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According to the website SuperYachtFan , the 460-foot superyacht belongs to Russian billionaire Eduard Khudainatov. However, Bloomberg News reported in 2022 that he is a "straw owner" of the superyacht — as well as another ship — and that the Scheherazade actually belongs to Putin.

The Financial Times reported that the Scheherazade has 22 cabins, two helicopter decks and a spa and that it's being refitted by the Italian Sea Group. NPR reached out to the Italian Sea Group for comment but did not hear back before publication.

The United States created Task Force KleptoCapture in the wake of Putin's war against Ukraine, aiming to hold Russian oligarchs accountable for evading sanctions. In its one year of operation, the task force has brought charges to at least 35 individuals and entities, NPR previously reported.

Part of those efforts included seizing luxury items belonging to billionaires with ties to the Kremlin. This includes items like a 348-foot yacht seized in Fiji in May 2022, which is valued at about $300 million and is now sitting in San Diego.

Suviana, la strage degli operai - I dispersi si cercano con i gommoni. La Cgil: «Non si sa per chi lavorassero le 3 vittime»

Scheherazade, lo «yacht di Putin» è stato sequestrato

di Marco Gasperetti 06 mag 2022

Scheherazade, lo «yacht di Putin» è stato sequestrato

«The Italian Sea Group comunica che la Guardia di Finanza di Massa Carrara ha dato esecuzione al Decreto di congelamento di risorse economiche del 06 maggio 2022 del Ministero dell’Economia e delle Finanze con il quale è stato disposto il congelamento dell’imbarcazione Sherazade IMO 9809980». Lo annuncia la società di nautica di lusso in una nota in cui sottolinea che ciò «non genererà alcun impatto su tutte le proprie attività che procederanno regolarmente» e che «continuerà a collaborare con le autorità».

I lavori di manutenzione sul misterioso Scheherazade , lo yacht di 140 metri dal valore di 700 milioni di dollari che si sospetta possa essere di Putin, non sono ancora terminati. Il bacino della società privata che lo ospita nel porto di Marina di Carrara è stato però riempito d’acqua e dunque il panfilo avrebbe potuto tornare in mare aperto molto presto. Venerdì 6 maggio è arrivata la notizia del blocco della nave: il ministro Daniele Franco ha firmato il decreto di congelamento dell’imbarcazione di lusso. L’imbarcazione, battente bandiera delle Isole Cayman e ormeggiata a Marina di Carrara, era da tempo all’attenzione delle autorità competenti.

Il proprietario è l’ex presidente di Rosneft

Il motivo non è l’appartenenza del super yacht al capo del Cremlino che non è stata accertata, almeno per ora. Formalmente la proprietà del panfilo è riconducibile all’oligarca Eduard Khudaynatov, ex presidente di Rosneft e proprietario di Villa Altachiara, la residenza sul promontorio di Portofino dove morì la contessa Francesca Vacca Agusta . E anche se c’è il sospetto, da parte dei servizi segreti americani e del team del dissidente russo Alexsej Navalny che Putin possa avere a disposizione questo lussuoso gioiello galleggiante, manca la prova regina. Adesso però è l’ufficiale proprietario a rischiare provvedimenti. L’Italia, secondo l’ Ansa , ha chiesto che il nome di Khudaynatov sia inserito nella black list europea e, in attesa che questo avvenga con conseguente sequestro ( un altro oligarca, Andrey Melnichenko, ha messo in mano a un pool di avvocati la pratica del suo yacht da 530 milioni sequestrato a Trieste dalla Guardia di Finanza, ndr ), lo yacht è stato «congelato» con un provvedimento del ministero dell’Economia. A chiamare lo Scheherazade «lo yacht di Putin» erano stati, come riportato dal New York Times, alcuni membri dell’equipaggio. Poi, dopo smentite e contro smentite, erano stati pubblicati i nomi dei membri dell’equipaggio e l’ipotesi Putin aveva preso ancora più forza.

Peskov, il portavoce di Putin all’ombra dello zar tra super orologi e yacht

di Marco Imarisio, nostro inviato a Mosca

yacht di putin prezzo

La rivelazione di Navalny

Il team di Aleksei Navalny, l’attivista politico russo avversario di Putin prima avvelenato e poi imprigionato nelle carceri di Mosca, aveva rivelato che nella lista dei 23 nomi dell’equipaggio compilata a Carrara il 17 dicembre del 2020 (la yacht arriva spesso in Toscana per lavori di manutenzione) apparivano nomi legatissimi al leader del Cremlino . Secondo Maria Pevchikh e Georgi Alburov, due persone del gruppo vicino al dissidente Navalny, «il numero due dello yacht si chiama Sergey Grishin, registrato nelle rubriche telefoniche di diverse altre persone come Sergei G Fso. A seguire, c’è Anatoly Furtel, residente a via Furmanova, 10, a Sochi, sede dell’ufficio dell’Fso che garantisce la sicurezza della residenza del presidente di Bocharov Ruchey». Un altro membro dell’equipaggio sarebbe Evgheny Schvedov, ufficiale di sicurezza per l’unità militare 38974, che poi risulta essere sempre l’Fso per il Caucaso. Putin avrebbe scelto Scheherazade dopo aver trasferito il precedente yacht, chiamato Graceful, all’oligarca Gennadi Timchenko.

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Consip si rinnova. l’ad mizzau: «sarà l’amazon della pa vicina alle imprese».

di Antonella Baccaro

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Watch CBS News

Satellite image shows super yacht linked to Putin out of reach of sanctions

By Catherine Herridge , Michael Kaplan, Andrew Bast, Jessica Kegu

March 3, 2022 / 7:30 AM EST / CBS News

As Europe and the U.S. bear down with a raft of aggressive sanctions targeting Russian President Vladimir Putin, the super yacht he is believed to own has found safe harbor in a highly militarized port in Russian territorial waters. In new satellite imagery obtained by CBS News, the yacht can be seen docked in a port in Kaliningrad, near Russia's nuclear weapons operations. 

Experts say Putin's luxury vessel has become a symbol not only of his vast hidden wealth, but also of how challenging that money has been to find. 

"He's a KGB agent, so he's crafty. He knows how to hide when he needs to," said John Smith, former director of the Treasury Department's Office of Foreign Assets Control, which administers and enforces all foreign sanctions.

Putin's purported yacht "Graceful" docked in Kaliningrad, Russia

Data from MarineTraffic, a global intelligence group, shows Putin's alleged yacht, the Graceful, left Germany two weeks before the invasion of Ukraine . 

Putin's government salary is said to be about $140,000, but that doesn't begin to explain the mansions, million-dollar watch collection and over-the-top yacht. 

"It would be fair to say he's among the richest men in the world," Smith said. 

Though he sells himself as a man of the people, his wealth is estimated to be more than $100 billion. 

Putin's critics allege he also has a cliffside palace that includes an amphitheater and a personal tunnel to the beach that doubles as a security bunker. 

Palace in Gelendzhik, Russia

"Of course, he doesn't acknowledge it as being his own," Smith said. "It doesn't fit with the public persona that he's trying to create to actually acknowledge it." 

Putin relies on his oligarch friends to shield his fortune from sanctions, Smith said. 

"So if he asked them to do something, they do it in terms of hiding assets, squirreling them in different parts of the globe, they will do what he needs," he said. 

Those who have tried to expose Putin's fortune have done so at great personal risk. 

Putin critic Boris Nemtsov was assassinated on a bridge in the shadow of the Kremlin in 2015. Sergei Magnitsky died in 2009 under questionable circumstances in prison after he exposed $230 million in fraud by Putin's friends. Putin publicly condemned Nemtsov's murder and claimed Magnitsky died of a heart attack.  

His most recent No. 1 critic, Alexei Navalny , who helped expose Putin's lavish palace, emerged as a political rival and found himself repeatedly jailed. He nearly died after being poisoned two years ago, though Putin has denied responsibility for the poisoning. 

"Putin's wealth is one of the most dangerous topics," said Russian journalist Roman Badanin, who spent two decades investigating Putin's financial web. 

Badanin said Russian authorities sought to intimidate and silence his reporting team. Six months ago, he reached his breaking point. 

"I fled the country. My apartment was searched twice. I have like three criminal charges against me back in Russia," he said. 

In his State of the Union address, President Biden said the U.S. and its allies are waging economic war on Putin and Russian oligarchs. 

"We are joining with our European allies to find and seize your yachts, your luxury apartments and your private jets," Biden said. 

On Wednesday, the Justice Department announced the formation of a new task force that would target Russian oligarchs. 

"Russia is not a transparent economy," Smith said. "The U.S. and our allies have decent information on some of [Putin's] assets, I think a lot will remain a mystery for a long time in the future." 

The biggest financial hit for Putin would be sanctions on the energy sector, which Smith says the Russian president has used to build up his wealth for years. So far, Washington and the Europeans have been hesitant to do that. 

  • Vladimir Putin

Catherine Herridge

Catherine Herridge is a senior investigative correspondent for CBS News covering national security and intelligence based in Washington, D.C.

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A $700 million superyacht linked to Putin was seized in Italy last year. It's being treated to a refurb while it waits, and authorities won't say who's paying for it.

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Scheherazade, a $700 million superyacht linked to Russian President Putin, is being refitted in Italy.

Italy seized the yacht in 2022 following sweeping sanctions against Russia over the Ukraine war.

The unnamed owner of the yacht is paying for the vessel's staff, maintenance, and refit.

A $700 million superyacht linked to Russian President Vladimir Putin is sitting in an Italian port and being refitted on the unnamed owner's dime, the Financial Times reports .

Italy seized the Scheherazade superyacht in  May last year but allowed its unnamed sanctioned owner to continue paying for the vessel's staff, maintenance, and a refit while it sits in the Tuscan port of Marina di Carrara, the FT reported.

The 459-foot, four-year-old vessel features six floors, two helipads, a swimming pool, a beauty salon, and gold-plated bathrooms, reported by the FT and an Insider report .

It's now being refurbished by the Milan-listed Italian Sea Group, which confirmed the refit to the FT. The company declined to provide further details — including ownership — to the media outlet.

People with knowledge of the matter told the FT that the owner of the Scheherazade yacht is Eduard Khudainatov, the sanctioned former CEO of the Russian state oil company Rosneft.

However, the oligarch is merely the "straw owner" of the vessel,  Bloomberg  reported in May last year.

US authorities believe the superyacht could  belong to Putin ,  The New York Times  reported in March last year.

Two activists working with the imprisoned Putin opponent Alexey Navalny claimed last March that some of the ship's crew members were from a Russian state agency responsible for protecting Putin. The FT reported that the Kremlin denied these allegations.

The Scheherazade is one of the  many luxury assets that have been seized by the West following sweeping sanctions against Russia over the full-scale invasion of Ukraine that started in February 2022. Other yachts linked to Russian oligarchs that have been seized include the $81 million Alfa Nero  and the  $48 million Phi .

The Kremlin and Italian Sea Group did not immediately respond to requests for comment from Insider sent outside regular business hours.

Read the original article on Business Insider

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A $700 million luxury superyacht linked to Putin was seized by Italian authorities

  • A $700 million luxury megayacht with ties to Putin is frozen, according to Italian authorities.
  • An Italian police investigation found significant ties between the ship and the Russian government.
  • The yacht, called the Scheherazade, appeared ready to set sail after being refloated on Tuesday. 

Insider Today

A $700 million luxury megayacht with ties to Russian President Vladimir Putin has been seized, Italian authorities announced on Friday.

An Italian police investigation found significant connections between the ship, called the Scheherazade, and the Russian government, authorities said. 

Related stories

The Scheherazade appeared ready to set sail after being loaded with food and supplies and refloated on Tuesday, possibly in an effort aimed at leaving before it could be seized. The 459-foot vessel spent the previous nine months in a dry dock in the Tuscan port of Marina di Carrara, The New York Times reported.

An ex-crew member told The Times that conversations arose about Putin potentially being the owner of the yacht, but Italian authorities did not specify whether or not Putin owned the ship.

The Scheherazade is among the latest Russian-owned megayachts to be seized as a result of sanctions imposed after Russia's invasion of Ukraine.

The Amadea, a $300 million superyacht owned by sanctioned Russian oligarch Suleyman Kerimov, was also seized by officials in Fiji this week.

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Italy impounds $700 million megayacht linked to Putin

yacht di putin prezzo

ROME — Italian financial authorities said Friday that they have impounded a $700 million megayacht that has been linked in media reports and by anti-Kremlin groups to Russian President Vladimir Putin. But an element of mystery remains: Italy, in what it called its “ freezing decree ,” did not say who the owner might be.

Italian investigators had raced to investigate the vessel and prevent it from leaving the Tuscan port of Marina di Carrara. The yacht, known as the Scheherazade, had been undergoing repairs since before Russia invaded Ukraine. But this week, it returned to the water, according to a New York Times reporter who visited the marina, prompting fears that the vessel might depart and evade sanctions.

The ship, until the measures imposed Friday evening, would have been free to leave.

In announcing its action, Italy’s Finance Ministry said the yacht’s owner had “prominent” links with Russians already under European Union sanctions. The name of the owner was not specified, and Italy said only that its government had asked the E.U. to add the person to its sanctions list.

A spokesman for the Finance Ministry described Italy’s move as “provisional.”

Italy “proposed to the Council of the European Union the inclusion of the owner of the boat in the list,” the spokesman said. “Until then, the name cannot be public.”

In March, an investigation by the Italian daily La Stampa named the boat’s owner as Eduard Khudainatov, a former Russian oil executive. But the newspaper also raised a question about how somebody not listed as a billionaire could afford to purchase one of the world’s most luxurious yachts.

So, speculation about the Scheherazade has only intensified. Investigators working for jailed Russian opposition politician Alexei Navalny say the yacht’s owner is Putin himself. In March, Navalny’s team published what it said was the crew list of people who had worked on the yacht. They purportedly include members of the Russian state agency responsible for Putin’s personal protection.

“We think that this is a solid enough proof that Scheherazade belongs to Putin himself and must be immediately seized,” said Maria Pevchikh, the head of the Navalny-founded FBK investigation team.

The assets of Russia’s ruling and billionaire class are generally kept in tight secrecy, controlled on paper through opaque offshore companies. That has made it difficult in some cases for European countries to ascertain the real owners of villas, yachts and other luxury items. The Scheherazade is officially owned by an offshore company from the Marshall Islands, Pevchikh said.

Before Friday, Italy had managed to detain a $560 million megayacht connected to Andrey Melnichenko, a coal and fertilizer tycoon who is one of Russia’s 10 richest people. Italy has also blocked access to villas that oligarchs use as summer getaways.

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yacht di putin prezzo

Il super yacht di Putin a spese dello Stato: “Già costato 4 milioni”

Il super yacht di Putin a spese dello Stato: “Già costato 4 milioni”

L’italia, dopo il sequestro per le sanzioni, paga la manutenzione

del panfilo. Difficile recuperare i soldi

L'ascolto è riservato agli abbonati premium

Pochi giorni fa un molo vuoto fotografato dai satelliti a Marina di Carrara ha diffuso il sospetto nei social di tutto il mondo: il superyacht sequestrato a Vladimir Putin sembrava fuggito in alto mare. In realtà Repubblica ha ricostruito che è stato solo trasferito in un cantiere per la manutenzione periodica: lavori molto cari, che sono tutti a carico dello Stato italiano.

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I commenti dei lettori.

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The Graceful on the Kiel canal near Rendsburg, north of Hamburg, Germany, 7 February 2022.

Documents show Putin’s order to move superyacht before Ukraine invasion

Russian president ordered urgent removal of Graceful from Hamburg shipyard, investigation claims

Vladimir Putin moved his $100m (£75m) superyacht from a German shipyard to Russia just weeks before he ordered the invasion of Ukraine, according to secret documents released in a new investigation.

A Russian anti-corruption organisation set up by the jailed opposition leader Alexei Navalny claims emails show that the Russian president ordered the urgent moving of the 82-metre superyacht, called Graceful, from a shipyard in Hamburg, where it was undergoing a $32m refit, by 1 February 2022.

Photos show the ship being towed out of Hamburg on 7 February en route to the Russian exclave of Kaliningrad, after the shipyard missed the 1 February deadline.

Just 15 days later – on 22 February – Putin ordered the full-blown invasion of Ukraine. After the invasion, the US, UK and EU imposed sanctions on Russian-owned assets overseas, and dozens of oligarch-owned superyachts were seized across the world.

The US government’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) lists the Graceful as “blocked property in which President Vladimir Putin has an interest”.

The Graceful, also codenamed Kosatka, or Killer Whale, which features a 15-metre indoor swimming pool that can be converted into a dancefloor, is just one of several superyachts linked to Putin.

An email sent to Hamburg’s Blohm+Voss shipyard on 19 January 2022 said: “The owner wants the Graceful to be brought to the Russian Federation on February 1st … Please mobilise an uninterrupted crew – 2 shifts.” It continued: “Please accelerate all works which may interfere with Graceful sailing out on 01 February.”

The emails said the owner wanted to remove the boat to the Russian Federation to complete the works. “The owner is not happy with the retrofit. He is dissatisfied with the delays in the construction process,” the email from SCF Group, Russia’s largest shipping company, said. The work had been expected to take more than a year.

The emails are disclosed in a report by Russian investigative journalist Maria Pevchikh, who leads an anti-corruption foundation set up by Navalny.

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“Half of the country is forced to raise money for underwear and socks for mobilised soldiers, and to make trench candles, while the person who unleashed this war spends 3bn roubles just on repairs and purchases for his yacht,” her report states .

Putin’s largest superyacht, the $700m Scheherazade, has been impounded in the Italian port of Marina di Carrara, where it was undergoing repairs. He is also named by the US as the owner of a smaller superyacht called Olympia, valued at $22m.

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The Scheherazade, docked at the Tuscan port of Marina di Carrara, Tuscany

A small Italian town on the Tuscan coast is the epicentre of an investigation to discover the owner of one of the world’s biggest and most expensive superyachts.

The Guardian said the “mysterious 140-metre-long, six-floor” vessel, called the Scheherazade, is facing scrutiny from the Italian police and locals in Tuscany’s port of Marina di Carrara.

Activists working with jailed Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny are convinced that the yacht, which is worth $700m (£528m), is owned by Vladimir Putin .

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Researchers said that almost half of the Russian crew members that had been traced were employed by Russia’s Federal Security Service, which handles security for high-ranking officials including the president.

“They are Russian state employees, military personnel, and they regularly travel to Italy as a group to work on the mysterious yacht,” investigative journalist Maria Pevchikh wrote on Twitter .

However, the ship’s captain, Guy Bennett-Pearce, a British national, denied that Putin owned the yacht or had even set foot on it. “I have never seen him. I have never met him,” Bennett-Pearce told The New York Times , adding that its owner was not on any sanctions list.

The paper said that even by the standards of the “hyper-confidential world of superyachting”, there was an “unusual degree of secrecy” surrounding the Scheherazade.

Contractors and crew members have signed non-disclosure agreements, and the ship has a cover to hide its name plate. A tall metal barrier has also been erected on the pier to partly obscure the yacht from onlookers.

The Sun said the “sickening luxury” allegedly enjoyed by Putin on board includes “countless swimming pools, a spa, a sauna, a theatre, ballrooms, a gym, and two helipads”. Bathrooms are “adorned with gold toilet-roll holders and taps”, and the vessel even has its own hospital.

“Personal touches for the despot” reportedly include a judo gym adorned with framed pictures of black belts, as well as “the biggest TV on a yacht”, measuring in at 4.5 metres, that cost a million euros to install.

Tory MP Tom Tugendhat told the paper that “Putin’s pampered nautical palace” was “launched with cash stolen off the Russian people and now floats off the Italian Riviera showing us all the action we should take”.

Speaking to the Italian parliament via video link yesterday, Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelenskyy urged the authorities to seize the yacht. “Don’t be a resort for murderers,” he said. “Lock all their real estate, accounts and yachts – from the Scheherazade to the smallest ones.”

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Italy impounds €650 million super yacht linked to Russian president Vladimir Putin

"Scheherazade", worth an estimated $700 million, has been the subject of a probe into its ownership by Italy's financial police.

It boasts two helipads, a swimming pool and a movie theatre but the 140-metre luxury yacht the Sheherazade will not be setting sail any time soon.

It boasts two helipads, a swimming pool and a movie theatre but the 140-metre luxury yacht the Sheherazade will not be setting sail any time soon. 

The floating palace was impounded impounded by Italian authorities, under EU sanctions imposed against Russia in response to the war in Ukraine.

Anti-corruption activists have claimed that the boat, which is valued at €650 million, belongs to Russian President Vladimir Putin himself, citing as evidence a crew list which contains the names of people who work for the organisation that looks after the president’s security.

But the Italian ministry of finance said only that it had found "significant economic and business links” between the ship's owner and “eminent people in the Russian government".

Authorities intervened on Friday after being alerted that the yacht was getting ready to set sail from the Tuscan port of Carrara.

It had been berthed for several months for maintenance work at a shipyard at the Marina di Carrara, within the western seaside town of Massa.

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Us announces seizure of russian oligarch's superyacht in fiji, putin ally viktor vekselberg has luxury yacht seized in spain, say police, turkey welcomes abramovich's €900m superyacht into bodrum harbour.

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Unlikely challenger to Putin brings rare show of defiance, creating dilemma for Kremlin

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FILE – Liberal Russian politician Boris Nadezhdin speaks to journalists in Moscow, Russia, Tuesday, Dec. 26, 2023, after submitting documents to Russia's Central Election Committee for the March 17 presidential election. Thousands of people across Russia are signing petitions to support Nadezhdin’s the longshot candidacy as he challenges President Vladimir Putin. (AP Photo/Alexander Zemlianichenko, File)

They have lined up by the thousands across Russia in recent days, standing in the bitter cold for a chance to sign petitions to support an unlikely challenger to President Vladimir Putin.

Boris Nadezhdin has become a dilemma for the Kremlin as he seeks to run in the March 17 presidential election. The question now is whether Russian authorities will allow him on the ballot.

The stocky, bespectacled 60-year-old local legislator and academic has struck a chord with the public, openly calling for a halt to the conflict in Ukraine, the end of mobilizing Russian men for the military, and starting a dialogue with the West. He also has criticized the country’s repression of LGBTQ+ activism.

“The collection of signatures has gone unexpectedly well for us,” Nadezhdin told The Associated Press in an interview Wednesday in Moscow. “We didn’t expect this, to be honest.”

Nadezhdin’s name is a form of the Russian word for “hope,” and although he is highly unlikely to defeat the still-popular Putin, the lines are a rare sign of protest, defiance and optimism in a country that has seen a harsh crackdown on dissent since its troops rolled into Ukraine nearly two years ago.

Nadezhdin is running as a candidate for the Civic Initiative Party. Because the party is not represented in parliament, he’s not guaranteed a spot on the ballot and must collect over 100,000 signatures, with a limit of 2,500 from each of the dozens of the vast country’s regions, not just the biggest, more progressive cities.

Putin, who is running as an independent candidate rather than as the candidate of the United Russia ruling party, has collected over 3 million.

Waiting to sign a petition in St. Petersburg, Alexander Rakityansky told AP he went through a “period of apathy when I thought I couldn’t do anything.” Now, however, he sees Nadezhdin’s campaign as a chance to exercise his civil rights.

Originally from Belgorod, the Russian border city hit by repeated Ukrainian attacks, Rakityansky said he backed Nadezhdin so his hometown “doesn’t get bombed and people don’t die on the streets.”

Online videos have shown queues of supporters not just in Moscow and St. Petersburg but also in Krasnodar in the south, Saratov and Voronezh in the southwest and beyond the Ural Mountains in Yekaterinburg.

Even in the Far East city of Yakutsk, 450 kilometers (280 miles) south of the Arctic Circle, Nadezhdin’s team said up to 400 people a day braved temperatures that plunged to minus 40 Celsius (minus 40 Fahrenheit) to sign petitions.

“Our weather conditions are not perfect and it’s generally accepted that it’s difficult to involve people in the north in some kind of activity, but people are coming every day,” said Alexei Popov, the head of Nadezhdin’s election team in Yakutsk. He said they had initially expected about 500 signatures in total for the entire region.

At a petition collection site in Moscow, Kirill Savenkov, 48, said he supported Nadezhdin because of his stand on Ukraine and peace negotiations.

Others said they wanted a real alternative to Putin, who they suggested had led the country into a dead end.

“The economy is really falling, people are getting poorer and prices are rising,” said Anna, 21, of St. Petersburg, who refused to give her full name because she feared for her security. Putin, she said, has not done “anything good for the country.”

Nadezhdin’s campaign got a boost after opposition leaders abroad, including former tycoon Mikhail Khodorkovsky and supporters of imprisoned opposition politician Alexei Navalny, urged Russians to support any candidate who could deny Putin a share of the vote.

Exiled opposition activist Maxim Katz said on YouTube that whatever the outcome, Nadezhdin’s candidacy shows “there is one thing we know right now: Conversations about civic apathy in Russia are very far from reality. What we have is not civic apathy but a civic famine — an enormous hidden potential.”

Some analysts say the surge of support for Nadezhdin has surprised even the Kremlin, although Putin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said Thursday that “we don’t see him as a rival.”

Analysts say the election’s outcome is a foregone conclusion and that Putin will stay in power for another six years, but some also suggest it’s still a moment of genuine political risk for the Kremlin, which must project an aura of legitimacy for the balloting to be seen as a genuine contest.

For Putin to win a convincing victory, he needs his supporters to turn out and his critics must stay home with no “glimmer of hope,” said Ekaterina Schulmann, a political scientist and nonresident scholar at the Carnegie Russia Eurasia Center in Berlin.

“This is why Nadezhdin is such a problem,” she said in an interview. “He provides a shadow of hope.”

Nadezhdin’s supporters lining up in Moscow and St. Petersburg told AP it gave them the rare opportunity to be with like-minded people who want a different leader from Putin, 71, who has ruled Russia for 24 years.

“I understood that these are the people who want to change the current government and I want to be a part of this,” said Margarita, a 28-year-old student who also declined to give her surname for fear of retribution.

So far, Russia’s Central Election Commission has approved three candidates who were nominated by parties represented in parliament that largely support Kremlin policies: Nikolai Kharitonov of the Communist Party, Leonid Slutsky of the nationalist Liberal Democratic Party and Vladislav Davankov of the New People Party. Kharitonov ran against Putin in 2004, finishing a distant second.

In December, authorities barred from the ballot Yekatarina Duntsova, a former regional lawmaker who had called for peace in Ukraine. The commission cited technical errors in her paperwork.

Duntsova was probably barred because authorities “don’t know her, and so in their terms she is unpredictable. And above all they dislike unpredictable things,” Schulmann said.

Although there have been claims that Nadezhdin secretly has the Kremlin’s approval to run and is seen as kind of a spoiler candidate, he still could be ruled ineligible.

He has appeared as a pundit on Russian television and even criticized the conflict in Ukraine during a talk show on state-controlled NTV in September 2022 — a rare level of visibility not enjoyed by other opposition politicians such as Navalny and Vladimir Kara-Murza, both now imprisoned.

In that appearance, Nadezhdin said Putin was misled by intelligence services that apparently told him Ukrainian resistance would be brief and ineffective.

In his AP interview, Nadezhdin said he believes he has been allowed to run because he is a known entity and has not specifically criticized Putin.

“I personally know Putin,” he said, saying he met him before he became president in 2000, adding that in the 1990s, he was an assistant to then-Prime Minister Sergey Kiriyenko, now Putin’s first deputy chief of staff.

Schulmann said that while authorities could allow Nadezhdin to run, it’s a “dangerous gamble.”

“I think they will cut him off at the next stage when he brings those signatures,” she said, suggesting the Central Election Commission could declare some of them invalid and bar him from the ballot. She suggested authorities could also threaten him and his team with prison if he later urged his supporters to protest.

The election is the first since Putin annexed four Ukrainian regions and the first in which online voting will be used nationwide. Critics suggest that both are opportunities to rig results in favor of Putin — something the Kremlin has denied it will do.

No matter what the actual outcome, some analysts and political opponents suggest that the sight of those lining up in the cold for Nadezhdin reveals more about Russia today than the vote itself.

Although Nadezhdin indicated he believes Putin’s team did not initially perceive him as a risk, he said “the Kremlin administrators are now in a difficult position.”

If he were in their shoes, he said, “I would now be thinking, ‘Why did we let him do this?’”

Anatoly Kozlov in Moscow contributed.

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Russian crew aboard a superyacht possibly linked to Putin have left their jobs, workers say.

U.S. officials have said the Scheherezade, which is dry-docked in Italy, could be owned by the Russian leader.

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By Gaia Pianigiani

  • March 24, 2022

Russian crew members on a mysterious $700-million luxury yacht that U.S. officials say could be owned by President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia abruptly left their jobs and the Tuscan coastal town where it is undergoing repairs a couple of weeks ago amid scrutiny of the vessel, local union leaders and workers say.

The crew members had been fixtures in the small port of Marina di Carrara since the fall of 2020, when the 459-foot-long yacht, Scheherazade, arrived at a dry dock less than four months after being built. No owner has been publicly identified.

“They were replaced by a British crew,” said Paolo Gozzani, the local leader of Italy’s General Confederation of Labor trade union, on Wednesday. “I don’t know and don’t care whether the yacht is indeed Putin’s or not, but I worry about the repercussions on shipyard workers if police impound or confiscate the vessel.”

Workers at the shipyard and regular visitors to its private lounge confirmed that the Russians had routinely supervised the work done on the yacht and had drinks at the bar or played pool there in the evenings. The yacht, estimated by the website SuperYachtFan to cost about $700 million, has two helicopter decks, a swimming pool with a retractable cover that converts to a dance floor and a gym.

This week, the research team of Aleksei A. Navalny, the Russian opposition leader, published a video in which it argued, based on a 2020 crew manifest, that a dozen of the Russian crew members of the Scheherazade either worked for or had a connection with Russia’s Federal Protective Service. The team drew the conclusion that the yacht must belong to Mr. Putin or some of his closest aides.

The Scheherazade’s real ownership is hidden by various shell companies. American officials said this month they had found initial indications that it was linked to Mr. Putin but would not describe what information they had.

In an interview with The New York Times this month, the yacht’s captain, Guy Bennett-Pearce, declined to disclose the name of the owner, but denied that Mr. Putin owned or had ever been on the yacht. Mr. Bennett-Pearce said Thursday he wouldn’t comment further until an investigation by Italian authorities was finished.

Italy’s financial police have been looking into Scheherazade’s ownership for weeks. Italian investigators wouldn’t comment on Thursday, saying that the investigation was continuing.

In a speech to Italy’s Parliament this week, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky urged Italy to prevent Russians from vacationing in the country, as well as to freeze their assets, bank accounts and yachts, “f rom the Scheherazade to the smallest ones .”

Italian authorities have frozen over 800 million euros in assets from Russian oligarchs on the European sanctions list, including villas in Sardinia, Tuscany, Liguria and the Lake Como area, and three yachts.

Gaia Pianigiani is a reporter based in Italy for The New York Times.  More about Gaia Pianigiani

Our Coverage of the War in Ukraine

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China’s top leader, Xi Jinping, and Russia’s foreign minister, Sergey Lavrov, met in Beijing . The visit came days after the United States threatened new sanctions against Chinese companies if they aided Russia’s war in Ukraine.

The head of the U.N. nuclear watchdog agency has condemned recent drone strikes at the Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant , saying “such reckless attacks significantly increase the risk of a major nuclear accident.”

Russian rockets slammed into residential buildings in Kharkiv, Ukrainian officials said, killing at least seven people and injuring at least 11 more in the latest assault on Ukraine’s second-largest city .

Conditional Support: Ukraine wants a formal invitation to join NATO, but the alliance has no appetite for taking on a new member  that would draw it into the biggest land war in Europe since 1945.

‘Shell Hunger’: A desperate shortage of munitions in Ukraine  is warping tactics and the types of weapons employed, and what few munitions remain are often mismatched with battlefield needs.

Turning to Marketing: Ukraine’s troop-starved brigades have started their own recruitment campaigns  to fill ranks depleted in the war with Russia.

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The barber of seville, description.

This quintessential comedy features some of the most iconic music in the world and has introduced millions of people of all ages to the joy of opera, yet it remains a perennial favorite for the most hardened opera goer. The story of the barber Figaro and his machinations in smoothing the course of true love returns to the California, led by Mo. Marcheso with a splendid ensemble cast and whimsical new production.

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Know Before You Go

The performance will run approximately three hours with one intermission.

All performances of  The Barber of Seville will be performed in Italian with English & Spanish supertitles.

The run time includes the intermission in its overall time.

Doors open 90 minutes before the performance.

12:30 PM for matinees and 6:00 PM for evening performances

Join us for a preshow discussion at 1:00 PM for matinees and 6:30 PM for evening performances.

The preshow discussion will be hosted by Resident Conductor Johannes Löhner.

For our Saturday, November 25th performance there will not be a preshow lecture, we will instead have a group music lesson for  The Barber of Seville Family Day.

The organ player will be performing 30 minutes before curtain.

We always encourage you to choose public transportation when possible, but if you do drive, please give yourself plenty of extra time and carpool whenever possible.

For those being dropped off / picked up, there is a passenger loading zone directly in front of the theatre entrance. For more information on parking in Downtown San Jose please visit parksj.org

California Theatre Box Office Entrance 345 S 1st St, San Jose, CA

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Tenor Andrew Green Michael S. Kim Eric Mellum Michael Mendelson Nicolas Vasquez-Gerst

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COMMENTS

  1. Putin, risolto il mistero dello yacht da 140 metri: ecco chi è il

    Lo yacht più grande del mondo, ormeggiato in Italia a Marina di Carrara, lungo 140 metri e del valore stimato in circa 700 milioni di dollari non apparterebbe al presidente Putin, come invece...

  2. $700 million superyacht tied to Putin is still being maintained in

    Italy won't say who's paying for the care of a $700 million superyacht tied to Putin. August 7, 20234:53 PM ET. By. Dustin Jones. Enlarge this image. The Scheherazade, a 460-foot superyacht, has ...

  3. Congelato lo Scheherazade, lo "yacht di Putin" era pronto a salpare

    Congelato lo Scheherazade, lo "yacht di Putin" era pronto a salpare (destinazione Dubai). Ecco come la Finanza l'ha bloccato. Secondo l'intelligence Usa è una delle mega barche del tesoro ...

  4. 'Mysterious': the $700m superyacht in Italy some say belongs to Putin

    F or several months, the mysterious 140-metre-long, six-floor superyacht has towered over the smaller boats in the shipyard in Marina di Carrara, a town on Italy's Tuscan coast, arousing chatter ...

  5. Scheherazade, lo «yacht di Putin» è stato sequestrato

    Scheherazade, lo «yacht di Putin» è stato sequestrato. «The Italian Sea Group comunica che la Guardia di Finanza di Massa Carrara ha dato esecuzione al Decreto di congelamento di risorse ...

  6. American Officials Believe They Have Located Putin's Yacht

    U.S. Officials Say Superyacht Could be Putin's. They say they have indications that the $700 million, 459-foot yacht, which is in dry dock in Italy, is associated with the Russian president ...

  7. Vladimir Putin's Superyacht Graceful Has A New Name ...

    Besides Kosatka, Putin has been linked to at least five more yachts: the $507 million, 459-foot Scheherazade, which is technically owned by oil & gas billionaire Eduard Khudainatov but is believed ...

  8. Satellite image shows super yacht linked to Putin out of reach of

    Putin's government salary is said to be about $140,000, but that doesn't begin to explain the mansions, million-dollar watch collection and over-the-top yacht. "It would be fair to say he's among ...

  9. Putin-Linked Superyacht May Elude Sanctions, by Setting Sail

    MARINA DI CARRARA, Italy— The Italian police are in a race to finish investigating the ownership of a $700 million superyacht, which U.S. officials say is linked to President Vladimir V. Putin ...

  10. A 459-Foot Mystery in a Tuscan Port: Is It a Russian's Superyacht?

    In Marina di Carrara, a small Italian town on the Tuscan coast, one of the world's biggest, newest and most expensive superyachts — called the Scheherazade — is under scrutiny by the Italian ...

  11. A $700 million superyacht linked to Putin was seized in Italy last year

    Italy seized the yacht in 2022 following sweeping sanctions against Russia over the Ukraine war. The unnamed owner of the yacht is paying for the vessel's staff, maintenance, and refit. A $700 million superyacht linked to Russian President Vladimir Putin is sitting in an Italian port and being refitted on the unnamed owner's dime, the Financial ...

  12. $700 Million Superyacht Linked to Putin Seized by Italian ...

    A $700 million luxury megayacht with ties to Putin is frozen, according to Italian authorities. An Italian police investigation found significant ties between the ship and the Russian government ...

  13. Italy impounds $700 million megayacht linked to Putin

    3 min. ROME — Italian financial authorities said Friday that they have impounded a $700 million megayacht that has been linked in media reports and by anti-Kremlin groups to Russian President ...

  14. Il super yacht di Putin a spese dello Stato: "Già costato 4 milioni"

    Da quel momento, tocca allo Stato farsi carico dello yacht di Putin. Oltre al conto in sospeso di sei milioni mandato all'oligarca del petrolio, lo Stato ha già sborsato altri quattro milioni ...

  15. Documents show Putin's order to move superyacht before Ukraine invasion

    Putin's largest superyacht, the $700m Scheherazade, has been impounded in the Italian port of Marina di Carrara, where it was undergoing repairs. He is also named by the US as the owner of a ...

  16. The mystery of the £500m superyacht 'owned by Vladimir Putin'

    The Guardian said the "mysterious 140-metre-long, six-floor" vessel, called the Scheherazade, is facing scrutiny from the Italian police and locals in Tuscany's port of Marina di Carrara.

  17. Italy impounds €650 million yacht linked to Vladimir Putin

    Anti-corruption activists have claimed that the boat, which is valued at €650 million, belongs to Russian President Vladimir Putin himself, citing as evidence a crew list which contains the ...

  18. This $50 million yacht may be linked to Putin, according to ...

    CNN's Erin Burnett speaks with Ilia Rozhdestvenskii, a reporter at the Dossier Center, about his new reporting that links Russian President Vladimir Putin to a $50 million yacht.

  19. Unlikely challenger to Putin brings rare show of defiance, creating

    "I personally know Putin," he said, saying he met him before he became president in 2000, adding that in the 1990s, he was an assistant to then-Prime Minister Sergey Kiriyenko, now Putin's ...

  20. Russian crew aboard a superyacht possibly linked to Putin have left

    Russian crew members on a mysterious $700-million luxury yacht that U.S. officials say could be owned by President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia abruptly left their jobs and the Tuscan coastal town ...

  21. The Barber of Seville

    All performances of The Barber of Seville will be performed in Italian with English & Spanish supertitles. The run time includes the intermission in its overall time. Doors open 90 minutes before the performance. 12:30 PM for matinees and 6:00 PM for evening performances. Join us for a preshow discussion at 1:00 PM for matinees and 6:30 PM for ...

  22. Boats for sale in San Jose

    Find 137 boats for sale in San Jose, including boat prices, photos, and more. For sale by owner, boat dealers and manufacturers - find your boat at Boat Trader!

  23. La fronda dei trumpiani pro Putin blocca ancora gli aiuti a Zelensky

    La fronda dei trumpiani pro Putin blocca ancora gli aiuti a Zelensky. Le indiscrezioni sul "piano di pace" del tycoon spaccano il Congresso. Lo speaker Johnson costretto a rinviare il voto sui ...

  24. Boats for sale in San jose

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