Roman Abramovich has emerged as an unofficial channel to Russian president Vladimir Putin. He was present on Tuesday at both the formal Turkey-hosted morning talks between Russian and Ukrainian negotiators at Istanbul’s Dolmabahçe Palace and the informal huddle at the adjacent Shangri-La in the afternoon.
According
to report, while Abramovich was sipping on a tulip-shaped glass of Turkish
black tea, he sat on the sunlit terrace of Istanbul’s Shangri-La hotel on
Tuesday afternoon and talked intently with the Ukrainian negotiating team.
Despite
the seafood and burger restaurant’s extensive menu and large fridge advertising
its stock of dry-aged meat, the Russian oligarch did not appear to eat during
the entire meeting. Less than 24 hours had passed since he was reported to have
suffered symptoms consistent with poisoning.
At the
hotel, the billionaire former Chelsea owner sat and talked with Ukrainian MP
Rustem Umerov, who was also reported to have suffered symptoms after their
previous series of unofficial talks.
Abramovich,
who was surrounded by heavy security, leaned in to talk with Umerov, later
joined by the Ukrainian parliamentary leader and head of the delegation, David
Arakhamia. The rest of the Ukrainian delegation – including the defence
minister, Olekseii Reznikov, wearing military green – were seated at the far
end of the terrace, and later got up to reveal a forest of half-empty wine
glasses.
The
restaurant’s long terrace overlooks the Bosphorus and the adjacent bustling
Beşiktaş ferry stop, with travellers hurrying past seemingly unaware of their
proximity to the group or their furtive negotiations.
Russia has
denied any poisoning plot, and the claims remain murky. Umerov himself has
since said he was “fine” and called on people not to trust “unverified
information”.
However,
the Ukrainian foreign minister, Dmytro Kuleba, told Ukraine’s Channel 24
television before the meeting: “I advise anyone going through negotiations with
the Russian Federation not to eat or drink anything, and preferably avoid
touching any surface.”
At the
earlier official meeting at the palace, some progress appears to have been
made. Despite the difficulties of the talks, the results appeared warmer and more
productive than previous sessions in Belarus or talks between the Russian and
Ukrainian foreign ministers in the southern Turkish city of Antalya.
The
delegations conducted delicate negotiations facing one another at a long
conference table inside a stone-walled room, with pictures of the meeting
showing Abramovich seated at a small nearby table alongside the Turkish
presidential spokesman, İbrahim Kalın.
The
discussions followed a short opening speech by the Turkish president, Recep
Tayyip Erdoğan, who addressed them from a lectern, saying: “The world is
waiting for good news, and good news from you.”
The
Turkish foreign minister, Mevlüt Çavuşoğlu, told a press conference that “we
see with satisfaction that both sides are getting closer at every stage”. He
expressed hopes that the foreign ministers and later perhaps even the Ukrainian
president, Volodymyr Zelenskiy, and Putin would meet.
Later at the hotel, Mykhailo Podolyak, an adviser to Zelenskiy, resisted further questions from journalists and disappeared from view under the crystal chandeliers in the hotel lobby.
After
talking on the terrace, many from the Ukrainian delegation moved into the
restaurant’s interior away from public view, to a large table laden with food.
Once inside, Abramovich peeled off to sit on a plush sofa alone to make a phone
call, accompanied only by his glass of tea.
He later
followed Umerov and other members of the Ukrainian delegation, clutching
stuffed blue binders, to another area of the restaurant to continue their
discussions well into the late afternoon, hours after the official talks had
ended.
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