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Moscow court orders Sergei Pugachev to pay $1.5bn over bankruptcy

Moscow's arbitration court ruled on Thursday that Sergei Pugachev, a former associate of Russian president Vladimir Putin, should pay Rbs75.6bn ($1.5bn) for his role in the bankruptcy of Mezhprombank, the Russian bank he co-founded.

The ruling could open the way for the London lawyers of the DIA, Russia's state deposit insurance agency, which is acting as the bank's liquidator, to seek to enforce the claim by seizing the international assets of Mr Pugachev, who fled Russia for London in 2011.

One of Russia's richest men until he fell out of favour with the Russian president and a forced state takeover was launched of his multibillion-dollar business empire, Mr Pugachev called Thursday's decision "unprecedented and illegal".

He said he would appeal against the ruling, which found three of Mezhprombank's former senior executives jointly responsible, with Mr Pugachev, for the bankruptcy.

Mr Pugachev's remaining assets have been frozen under a worldwide order issued by London's High Court in July 2014 to support the DIA's claim.

The DIA's case centres on its claim that Mr Pugachev caused the 2010 bankruptcy of Mezhprombank, once one of Russia's biggest, by ordering the withdrawal of pledges on hundreds of millions of dollars in loans backed by shares in EPK, the vast Siberian coking coal company he once owned.

Mr Pugachev denies any role in the decision to remove the pledges, saying he sold his interest in the bank into a trust in 2002 after he became a senator.

The former oligarch says the $1.5bn asset gap at the bank was instead caused by a politically motivated state takeover of his empire, led by the sale at a knockdown price of his multibillion-dollar shipyard business, shares in which had been pledged as collateral for $1.15bn in loans from the central bank.

The shipyard business had been valued at $3.5bn by international audit firm BDO, more than enough to cover creditors' claims, but was sold for a fraction of that sum, $455m, to OSK, the state shipbuilding corporation.

Mr Pugachev said on Thursday it seemed clear that the DIA had abused the London court proceedings as "an instrument for obtaining information" for the Russian court case. The DIA's London lawyers, Hogan Lovells, had won the right to cross-examine Mr Pugachev for several days on his assets, while the DIA had deployed information from the London proceedings "out of context" in its filings to the Russian court, Mr Pugachev said. The DIA could not be reached for comment after hours in Moscow.

Mr Pugachev has claimed the state takeover of his assets - and the hefty legal costs of fighting the London freezing order - have all but wiped out his fortune. Mr Pugachev has claimed little cash remains on his account, leaving him with no choice but to battle in London's High court against claims relating to the freezing order since February without any defence lawyers.

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