Roman Abramovich

Roman Abramovich has seen his fortune grow by more than 3 billion pounds in the last year alone with the Chelsea FC owner now sitting on a total wealth of almost 11 billion pounds, Press Association quotes the Sunday Times Rich List 2006-07.
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December 6, 2006
Russian oil tycoon Roman Abramovich has just spent ten days at a top private health spa in Austria reportedly being treated for stress, Thisislondon web site reported referring to an article in an Austrian magazine.
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November 15, 2006
Russian billionaire, Chelsea owner Roman Abramovich has allegedly paid an Italian painter for imitations of famous artworks because he does not want to splash out on the originals, Ananova reports.
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Russian billionaire Roman Abramovich is building an 80 million pounds ($151 million)hospital in Moscow that is likely to become the first port of call for Russia’s rich and famous, The Sunday Times weekly reports.
The Moscow Medical Centre — which is financed by Millhouse LLC, Abramovich’s holding company — will be the country’s most luxurious and technologically advanced hospital.
Located in an 8.7-acre park on the southern edge of the capital a couple of miles from Rublyovka, Moscow’s version of Beverly Hills, the clinic will employ a medical staff of 700 to care for 400 people, including 80 in-house patients.
VIP patients will stay in 750 sq ft suites — the size of an ordinary two-bedroom Russian flat — with their own lavish bathroom and living room equipped with flat-screen television, internet access and fax machine to allow them to keep an eye on their businesses from their sickbeds.
The hospital, which is due to be completed next year, will be “as good as a five-star hotelâ€, said one of the managers overseeing the project.
“It’s aimed at Russia’s growing middle classes as well as the elite, including businessmen and members of the government.â€
“Abramovich is very keen to do his part to improve medical care in Russia,†said John Mann, the billionaire’s spokesman.
Abramovich, the owner of Chelsea football club with an estimated fortune of more than ?10 billion, is Russia’s richest man. He also backs a fund to help to train young health professionals.
Abramovich’s clinic will be in stark contrast to the majority of Russian hospitals, where the equipment sometimes dates back to the 1970s. Ordinary Russians — who under communism had free access to medical care — are at the mercy of a ruthless system dominated by bribes. Without greasing the palms of doctors and nurses, patients are condemned to long queues and negligent care.
When Abramovich, 40, bought Chelsea more than three years ago, he was criticized at home for not investing enough to improve life in Russia. His new hospital is unlikely to quell Russians’ deep resentment towards their fabulously rich oligarchs.
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October 30, 2006
At the height of the truffle season, British restaurants are serving carpaccios, risotto and even ice-cream with truffles. London based Russian billionaire Boris Berezovsky, as well as Chelsea SC owner Roman Abramovich, are said to be very fond of them, according to British media reports.An England restaurant is serving probably the country’s most expensive ice-cream — at 25 pound a scoop. For lovers of white truffles, who go to great lengths to seek out their favorite delicacy, it is probably also the ultimate luxury. The ice-cream is the piece de resistance at Luciano in St James’s, the restaurant launched a year ago by truffle lover Marco Pierre White with Rocco Forte.
Restaurants all over London are taking advantage of the truffle season, which lasts from this month to December, to offer such dishes as truffle risotto. But it is Luciano — under the inspiration of chef Marco Corsica — that is going the extra mile and offering truffles for pudding as well as starters and main courses.
The dish was created for the London based Russian billionaire Boris Berezovsky, a regular at Luciano and a man whose love of truffles knows no bounds. Maitre d’ George Perendes said: “When he is having truffle risotto and I get to his table it’s ’come on, George, keep shaving — don’t worry about the price’.†That price, incidentally, is 1,700 pounds a kilogram when the truffles come from Piedmont in Italy.
To make the pudding, Corsica first of all stores his eggs with the truffles inside a sealed box to infuse them with the flavour. The eggs are then used to make the ice-cream, which is served on a bed of truffle shavings with some more on top. No one can really complain they are getting short changed on the truffle front. The ice cream comes with a poached pear in aged balsamic vinegar — an essential ingredient, says Corsica, because without it the truffle would be overpowering. It is a conclusion with which this critic would have to concur.
Boris Berezovsky is not the only member of the super-rich club to have a taste for truffles. Roman Abramovich is also said to be fond of them, as is Madonna. “She comes here quite a lot and loves truffles,†said Perendes.
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October 27, 2006

Roman Abramovich, Russia’s richest man and owner of the English soccer club Chelsea, is planning to quit as a regional governor next year, Interfax news agency reported on Tuesday.
During his governorship of Chukotka, Abramovich has invested hundreds of millions of dollars and his close Kremlin ties to fight poverty in the bitterly cold and largely deserted region in Russia’s far east across the Bering Strait from Alaska.
“Abramovich is planning to initiate his resignation because he believes he has fulfilled all his tasks,†Interfax quoted an unnamed source in the regional administration as saying. “It’s on everyone’s lips in Chukotka.â€
The source told Interfax Abramovich could tender his resignation in December to leave his job from the New Year.
the Reuters news agency reported that Kremlin and the Chukotka administration officials could not be immediately contacted for comments. Abramovich’s spokesman said by telephone: “I have no information about this.â€
In the years of Vladimir Putin’s presidency, marked with a campaign against ’oligarchs’ —- Russia’s super-rich accused by the Kremlin of neglecting national interests —- Abramovich has become a widely cited positive example of a different approach.
Last year, when Kremlin-led campaign against billionaire Mikhail Khodorkovsky landed him in jail for fraud and tax evasion, rumours flew that Abramovich was planning to quit his Chukotka job and leave Russia.
But within months Putin re-appointed Abramovich, who has property in London and spends much of his time there, as governor for another five years in a move viewed by analysts as a stamp of the Kremlin’s confidence in him.
Interfax quoted analysts close to the Kremlin as saying that if Abramovich decided to leave this time, his move would not be motivated by politics.
“Normally, he does not have political problems,†head of Politika thin tanks, Vyacheslav Nikonov, said. “Almost certainly this is personal, there is nothing political about this.â€
The Russian edition of Forbes magazine this year estimated Abramovich’s wealth — mostly from oil and aluminium assets —- at $18.3 billion.
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October 18, 2006