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The Times July 28, 2006
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A game of two opposites
By Matthew Syed
AS ROMAN ABRAMOVICH continues to lavish his preposterous wealth upon Europe’s playboy footballers, spare a thought for those labouring for £1.90 per hour on the Sibneft oilrigs of western Siberia.
Spare a thought for the generations of workers who spent their lives striving to build the commanding heights of the Soviet economy, only to see them sold off at a fraction of the market price to the so-called oligarchs.
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Spare a thought for the millions of contemporary Russians whose faces still betray a sense of collective bewilderment that the country’s richest 100 businessmen are now worth more than a quarter of their GDP.
Abramovich made his fortune when he was involved in the £117 million purchase of a majority stake in Sibneft, an oil company, in one of the shadiest privatisations of the Yeltsin era. He went on to boost his shareholding by allegedly manipulating wage payments in order to take over worker-controlled stock and conducting a scandalous closed share issue in one of Sibneft’s most profitable subsidiaries. Last year an Abramovich-owned investment vehicle sold 73 per cent of Sibneft for £7.4 billion.
This is the dubious cash that is currently distorting the European football market and further inflating salaries. This summer alone Chelsea has bought Andriy Shevchenko (for £31 million), Michael Ballack (on astronomical wages of £130,000 per week) and is considering the purchase of Ashley Cole for more than £20 million. Hernán Crespo has been offered houses, boats and a private jet to remain in West London.
Meanwhile, GDP per capita in Russia lags below that of Botswana and Equatorial Guinea. The average wage is about £2,000 per annum.
Millions (about 18 per cent of the population) live below the poverty line. These are the victims of the botched and often corrupt privatisations that left Abramovich with three super-yachts, a private Boeing, a fleet of helicopters and a team of champagne-swilling footballers.
Chelsea’s monotonous dominance of English football has been achieved by an obscene redistribution of wealth from some of Europe’s poorest to some of football’s flashiest via one of Russia’s shadiest. It is a scandal that should appal every one of us — including the shameless supporters at Stamford Bridge who seem to regard it as a cause for celebration.
The Times July 28, 2006
+ Post a Comment
A game of two opposites
By Matthew Syed
AS ROMAN ABRAMOVICH continues to lavish his preposterous wealth upon Europe’s playboy footballers, spare a thought for those labouring for £1.90 per hour on the Sibneft oilrigs of western Siberia.
Spare a thought for the generations of workers who spent their lives striving to build the commanding heights of the Soviet economy, only to see them sold off at a fraction of the market price to the so-called oligarchs.
*
Spare a thought for the millions of contemporary Russians whose faces still betray a sense of collective bewilderment that the country’s richest 100 businessmen are now worth more than a quarter of their GDP.
Abramovich made his fortune when he was involved in the £117 million purchase of a majority stake in Sibneft, an oil company, in one of the shadiest privatisations of the Yeltsin era. He went on to boost his shareholding by allegedly manipulating wage payments in order to take over worker-controlled stock and conducting a scandalous closed share issue in one of Sibneft’s most profitable subsidiaries. Last year an Abramovich-owned investment vehicle sold 73 per cent of Sibneft for £7.4 billion.
This is the dubious cash that is currently distorting the European football market and further inflating salaries. This summer alone Chelsea has bought Andriy Shevchenko (for £31 million), Michael Ballack (on astronomical wages of £130,000 per week) and is considering the purchase of Ashley Cole for more than £20 million. Hernán Crespo has been offered houses, boats and a private jet to remain in West London.
Meanwhile, GDP per capita in Russia lags below that of Botswana and Equatorial Guinea. The average wage is about £2,000 per annum.
Millions (about 18 per cent of the population) live below the poverty line. These are the victims of the botched and often corrupt privatisations that left Abramovich with three super-yachts, a private Boeing, a fleet of helicopters and a team of champagne-swilling footballers.
Chelsea’s monotonous dominance of English football has been achieved by an obscene redistribution of wealth from some of Europe’s poorest to some of football’s flashiest via one of Russia’s shadiest. It is a scandal that should appal every one of us — including the shameless supporters at Stamford Bridge who seem to regard it as a cause for celebration.

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