Vitaly Arkhangelsky

Vitaly Dmitrievich Arkhangelsky
Born (1975-05-23) 23 May 1975 (age 49)
OccupationEntrepreneur

Vitaly Dmitrievich Arkhangelsky (born 23 May 1975 in Almaty, Kazakhstan) is a Russian entrepreneur with interests in shipping and insurance. The Russian authorities are seeking his extradition from France, where he and his family currently live, to face charges of economic crimes.[1] Arkhangelsky claims that he is a victim of expropriation and persecution by the associates of St.Petersburg ex-mayor Valentina Matvienko.[2] His case has been widely reported in the Russian and international media.[3][4][5]

Early life and education

He studied economics at St Petersburg State University, and pursued postgraduate research at the State University of Economics and Finance, also in St Petersburg. He additionally trained in Germany and at the Trondheim Business School in Norway.

Career

After completing his studies, he worked in the insurance sector. This led to a focus on shipping and to the foundation in 1999 of the Oslo Marine Group (OMG), of which he is president and majority shareholder. OMG is a holding company interested in insurance, port services and freight forwarding.[6] It expanded rapidly, opening representative offices in London and Hiroshima and acquiring major real estate assets in Russia, including the Vyborg Port and Western Terminal, a site within the port of St Petersburg, with redevelopment plans by the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development. OMG also expanded its fleet and placed orders for building new ships.[7]

These core assets of OMG are the subject of a legal dispute between Arkhangelsky and Bank of St. Petersburg, from which OMG had secured loans to finance its expansion.[8] In 2009, a Russian court ruled that the acquisition of Western Terminal by Sevzapalyans, believed to be controlled by the Bank of St Petersburg, was illegal.[9]

In 2010, these disputes were in progress when criminal investigations into Arkhangelsky were initiated in Russia and charges made. Arkhangelsky was alleged by the Russian authorities to have laundered 56.5 million roubles fraudulently acquired from Morskoi Aktsionerni Bank (MAB).[10]

In 2009, Arkhangelsky and his family fled to Nice, France, where he claimed political asylum. This was followed by a Russian extradition request on charges of fraud. A judge in Nice freed him on a bail of 300,000 euros pending a hearing, which can last many months.[11]

From France, Arkhangelsky mounted a legal counteroffensive, claiming that he was a victim of a campaign to ruin him orchestrated by the ex-Mayor of St Petersburg, Valentina Matvienko.[2][12] He argued that the Bank St Petersburg refused to allow OMG to restructure its debts with the deliberate intention of bankrupting it and taking control of its assets.[11] In August 2011, he issued a writ of summons in the District Court of Nicosia, Cyprus, against “three shadowy Cypriot companies”, which he claimed were set up exclusively for the purpose of stealing his assets for the benefit of a "group of conspirators", which "probably" included the ex-Mayor of St. Petersburg's and the ex-Chief of Police.[13]

References

  1. ^ "Un opposant russe en exil à Nice est la cible du Kremlin | nicematin.com". www.nicematin.com. Archived from the original on 2010-11-27.
  2. ^ a b "La guérilla judiciaire d'un homme d'affaires russe incarcéré en France" Le Monde 25 November 2010
  3. ^ "‘Bank tried to ruin me’ says tycoon" TheFrenchPaper 28 November 2010
  4. ^ "Мятежный бизнесмен воюет из Франции с Матвиенко". 2010-11-26.
  5. ^ "Vitaly Arkhangelsky. Profile" TradeWinds
  6. ^ "Oslo Marine Group Ltd." Businessweek
  7. ^ "Oslo Marine puts fleet plans on ice" Globmaritime 23 March 2009
  8. ^ "GRIP OR GRAB — OSLO MARINE GROUP FIGHTS BANK ST PETERSBURG FOR MARINE ASSETS" Dances with Bears 21 July 2009
  9. ^ Russian court voids acquisition of OMG terminal by little-known co. 28 September 2009, Prime-TASS News (Russia)
  10. ^ Petersburg entrepreneur suspected of laundering RUB 56 mln. 28 July 2010, ITAR-TASS World Service
  11. ^ a b "Russian opposition tycoon claims bank tried to ruin him" Agence France Presse 25 November 2010
  12. ^ "Vitaly Arkhangelsky blames corruption for empire fall" Lloyd's List 9 November 2010
  13. ^ "Arkhangelsky targets ‘shadowy’ Cypriots" TradeWinds August 5, 2011.

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