German resort’s rift over Russian oligarch resonates across country
FRANKFURT – A German politician who mobilized a protest
against a now-sanctioned Russian resident of his resort town has attracted a
following, but also angry emails and a threatening phone call.
This mirrors Germany’s ambivalence to becoming a sanctuary for
wealth in a culture that cherishes privacy but that critics say has allowed the
mega-rich to squirrel away assets in secrecy.
And while Britain, France, Italy and Spain have seized
yachts and other property since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and the subsequent
imposition of sanctions on influential Russians, Germany appears to have sat on
its hands.
“For years, Germany has been a magnet for dirty money from
all over the world. For too long, we did not look closely enough, and now we
are suffering the consequences,” Lisa Paus, a member of Germany’s parliament,
said.
A government task force to enforce sanctions is just getting
off the ground.
Germany’s uneasy relationship with oligarchs has shone an
uncomfortable spotlight on the Bavarian lakeside community around Tegernsee,
where locals and officials say at least three homes belong to Uzbekistan-born
businessman Alisher Usmanov.
Usmanov, who has interests in mining and telecommunications
and a net worth that Britain estimates at more than $18 billion, was described
by the European Union as a “pro-Kremlin oligarch with particularly close ties
to Russian President Vladimir Putin” when it imposed sanctions on him.
His holding company USM, whose website describes Usmanov as
an entrepreneur, investor and “one of the world’s most generous
philanthropists”, did not respond to requests for comment. Two other companies
he owns did not respond.
Thomas Tomaschek, a member of the council of Rottach-Egern
on Tegernsee’s southern tip, this month called a demonstration to say Usmanov
was no longer welcome, even though restaurants, carpenters and hoteliers had
profited from his presence.
The event attracted 300 people, representing prominent
members of all parties in a town of 5,000, but also a backlash.
Tomaschek says he received an email saying “shame on you”
for demonstrating “against a Russian who clearly lives as a private person in
Rottach-Egern”. Another wrote: “Should anyone who has shaken Putin’s hand be
deprived of assets in Germany?”
A caller screamed “Nazi pig” down the phone, prompting him
to file a complaint and to remove an axe for chopping wood from his doorstep in
case someone violent appeared. The local police confirmed it was investigating.
‘SAFE HAVEN’
Angry grass roots activists are now drawing attention to
Germany’s impotence when it comes to seizing assets.
Mathis Lohaus, a researcher at Freie Universitaet Berlin who
focuses on corruption, is outraged that no one had seized a superyacht that the
United States says is owned by Usmanov and has been berthed in the port of
Hamburg.
Lohaus said he took to Twitter to express his frustration
when Germany failed to seize the ship, which has an indoor pool, two helipads
and is valued at more than $600 million.
“The whole history of Germany over the last few years has
been one of unenthusiastic enforcement,” Lohaus said.
There has been no confiscation of the yacht, a spokesperson
for Hamburg’s economics ministry said last week.
Meanwhile, a prominent campaign group against financial
crime recently launched a petition addressed to German finance minister
Christian Lindner demanding action.
“Germany offers them all a safe haven for their dirty money.
This has to stop now!” the Finanzwende petition reads. The finance ministry
said in an emailed response to Reuters that it has been working on measures to clamp
down.
Part of Germany’s problem with enforcement has been
bureaucracy, with responsibility spread across ministries.
In an effort to address this, Germany last week said that it
was forming a task force to oversee the implementation of sanctions across its
finance, economy and interior ministries, as well as customs and police.
There are cultural and historical factors at play too.
Hartmut Baeumer, a former judge and now chair of
Transparency International Germany, said Germans are risk-averse when it comes
to confronting legal issues, while a belief in strong protection of an
individual’s rights runs deep.
“We Germans are still working through the consequences of
the Nazi era. The pendulum has swung very far in the direction of privacy and
individual freedoms,” Baeumer said.
‘A BILLIONAIRES’ PLACE’
German and international elites have long sought refuge in
the rolling hills around Tegernsee, which sits between Munich and the Alps, and
Rottach-Egern markets itself as home to Europe’s first beauty farm and
“first-class and elegant” hotels.
Last week the average price of homes in Rottach-Egern on a
popular real-estate portal was more than 4 million euros, while the average
taxpayer in the surrounding county pays 66% more income tax than those in the
rest of Germany.
“Tegernsee is a billionaires’ place,” one prominent local
businessman said on condition of anonymity.
Gerhard Hofmann, Rottach-Egern’s city manager, said he had
never witnessed such uproar in his native town.
Usmanov “just wanted to have his peace”, Hofmann said,
adding that the oligarch had helped the local economy by employing local
architects and companies.
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