Effect of Roman Abramovich Roman Abramovich was a millionaires in Russia who became the owner of the Chelsea Football Club and turned over the football world. With the arrival of Abramovich of Rome in July 2003, his football players and fans around the world were able to consume Chelsea and continue to rebuild. Chelsea is becoming a dominant force in the England league and is progressing. In his first year inheriting Abramovich, he persuaded the Portuguese coach Mourinho to charge Chelsea.
Ksenia Sobchak (center) and Dasha Zhukova (right) The owner of Chelsea Football Club is Roman Abramovich. After Chelsea's victory, Abramovic's wife hired a famous London divorce attorney. Zhukova dropped out of London to go to his father's mansion on the outskirts of Moscow. There she interacted with former mayor of St. Petersburg, the daughter of Xathaie Sovechuck, an anatoly sob chuck 's "Paris Hilton in Moscow." The media in London speculated that Abramovich's London divorce agreement would amount to £ 5 billion. Finally, the divorce took place in the Chukot Autonomous Region in the northeastern corner of Russia. Abramovich is governor of Chukotka; his wife received only £ 155 million. After divorce, Zhukova left Moscow and traveled with Abramovich in a house between southern France, London, Moscow, St. Barth and his three yachts to inform them that they are themselves romantic participants.
Roman Abramovich became an orphan at the age of four in 1970 and his grandmother and other relatives grew up in a small town in northern Moscow. He joined the Soviet army at the age of 18 and worked on fuel boiling there. A soldier's network draws fuel from military vehicles and Abramovich sells its fuel to officers. In 1991, he established the Russian oil trader AVK. In 1992, Abramovich was sent to prison for theft of 55 refueling military diesel cars. Diesel was transported from the Ukhta Refinery to the Kaliningrad military base, but Abramovich transported it to Riga in Latvia. When a Latvian company compensated for the military base, Abramovich was released from prison in a somewhat obscure way after working with the authorities.
Roman Abramovich and Vladimir Potanin, a cover story of stock loan architects. "We did not go well" is called "stock loan". Most of the stocks of 12 large natural resource companies are sold at discounted prices to pre-selected bidders. For example, in 1995, oil and gas company Sibneft sold to Boris Berezovsky and Roman Abramovich for $ 100 million. In 2005, the Russian government collected Siberian oil companies from Abramovich for $ 13 billion. The cover of "stock loan" is the idea of banker Vladimir Potanin. In "stock loan", the oligarchy government provided loans to the Russian government and the government used ownership of these companies as collateral. However, the government has never paid a loan, and each oligarch party provided collateral to each "loan". Potanin himself bought Russia's largest platinum and nickel producer Norilsk Nickel.