lpm wrote: ↑Thu Mar 10, 2022 2:36 pm
They can't sign contracts with academy players. There will unfortunate 16 year olds hoping to get a renewed contract for next season but now can't.
They (Chelsea) can't even sell tickets to matches, or merchandise in their shop. They can respect tickets they have already sold. They can pay their players, so long as they have money in the bank account.
So Chelsea haven't been nationalised. But the government do seem to have created a hostage situation where either Abramovich arranges to do something they want - somewhat ironic as governments shouldn't be doing deals with individuals that they have sanctioned - or Chelsea FC goes down the tubes before very long, because they have no power to take in income or manage their business in the normal way.
I don't care for Chelsea or Abramovich. But I do care for the many normal people this action affects, the fans, the many ordinary employees, the league, in ways that seem arbitrary, unfair, and unreasonable for them to predict. It doesn't seem to look like normal sanctions. Rather it seems to be to look worryingly like government power overreaches, including interference in the operation of a football league.
You can sanction an individual due to their connection to a pariah state. But that ought to be a temporary removal of access from their assets until the issue is resolved, a cutting of the financial transfers between the individual and their asset, not an expropriation, or interference in the continuation of normal operation of those assets to the extent they are operating outside the financial flows of that individual.
As David Allen Green wrote the other day, "
A government should not be able to deprive people of possessions and property by mere ministerial diktat". Even if they are a Russian oligarch subject to sanctions.
It seems to be grandstanding to distract attention from the long-running complicity the government has with kleptocratic Russians, and its limited willingness to do anything about the Londongrad Laundromat, up to now, and after now too.