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Roman Abramovich took the rare step of fighting the claims in court in a bid to set the record straight on his aims and ambitions for Chelsea |
Claims that Roman Abramovich bought Chelsea on the instruction of Vladimir Putin have been ruled as defamatory in the High Court.
Chelsea owner Abramovich has received early vindication of his continuing law suit against HarperCollins and author Catherine Belton.
A ruling from judge Mrs Justice Tipples has upheld Abramovichโs claims of nine defamatory statements made against him in Beltonโs book Putinโs People.
Beltonโs book includes claims from Sergei Pugachev that Abramovich bought Chelsea in 2003 on the personal orders of Russian president Putin.
Abramovich took the rare step of fighting the claims in court in a bid to set the record straight on his aims and ambitions for Chelsea.
And a ruling on Wednesday has left the Chelsea owner calling for the claims to be corrected.
โWe welcome todayโs judgment which rules that the book โPutinโs Peopleโ indeed makes several defamatory allegations about Mr Abramovich, including false allegations about the nature of the purchase of Chelsea Football Club,โ said a spokesperson for Abramovich.
โWe are pleased that the judgment has found that the book carries a total of 9 defamatory allegations against Mr Abramovich, in line with the arguments in Mr Abramovichโs initial claim.
โTodayโs judgment also rules that these allegations are allegations of fact and not an expression of opinion, as argued by the defendants.
โTodayโs judgment further underscores the need for the false and defamatory claims about Mr. Abramovich to be corrected as soon as possible.โ
Russian Billionaire Pugachev claimed in the High Court in 2018 that Putin had ordered Abramovich to purchase Chelsea.
Pugachevโs witness statements were branded โself-servingโ and โimpossible to believeโ by Mrs Justice Rose, in his dispute with JSC Mezhdunarodniy Promyshlenniy Bank.
Pugachev went on to lose the High Court case, but his allegations about Abramovich and Chelsea were repeated in interviews for the 2020 book Putinโs People.
The High Court judgement has ruled that the disputed statements in Putinโs People are presented as fact, not opinion.
โIn my view, these passages would not be understood by the ordinary reasonable reader as providing sufficient reason to doubt that the claimant purchased Chelsea Football Club on Putinโs orders,โ read Mrs Justice Tipplesโ judgement.
โIn conclusion, therefore, the meanings I have identified are all defamatory of the claimant at common law.โ
Press Association