USD
41.32 UAH ▲0.1%
EUR
42.99 UAH ▼1.54%
GBP
51.69 UAH ▼1.23%
PLN
9.91 UAH ▼1.97%
CZK
1.7 UAH ▼1.88%
According to journalists, the former husband of Putin's daughter in the Netherla...

Putin's former son -in -law was questioned and arrested his property in the Netherlands - the media (photo)

According to journalists, the former husband of Putin's daughter in the Netherlands also selected a laptop and a mobile phone during interrogation. On May 12, the Dutch prosecutor's office seized on a plot of land of 1432 square meters near Amsterdam, owned by the former son -in -law of Russian President Vladimir Putin. About it writes The Guardian.

It is reported that the land in the Duvendrecht belongs to Yorrita Faassen, a Dutch businessman who was married to Maria Vorontsova, the eldest daughter of the Kremlin. The entry in the Netherlands Land Register indicates that the site was confiscated for financial, economic and environmental offenses.

According to Helin Over de Linen, lawyer and expert in sanctions, confiscation indicates that Faassen will probably become the object of investigation, although the exact cause of confiscation cannot be established from public documents. The Dutch prosecutor's office did not comment on the cause of the confiscation. The newspaper writes that Faassen, who lives in Moscow, was questioned at the Dutch Schiphol Airport. It is expected that he has violated the sanctions imposed.

He has confiscated a laptop and a mobile phone. Fasssen returned to Moscow. According to journalists, both adult daughters of Putin, Maria and Catherine were included in the EU and US sanction lists in April 2022, shortly after Russia began a full -scale invasion of Ukraine. However, Faassen is not amenable to any sanctions in the US, EU or the United Kingdom. The material says that Faassen married Vorontsova in 2008, but then the couple divorced.

The land near Amsterdam and its connection with Faassen is well known to the public. Shortly after the full -scale invasion of Russia began in 2022, protesters set out posters on the site, who urge Putin to release oppositionist Alexei Navalny. It is reported that although the site is now empty, in 2021 the registered owner of Faassen applied for permission to build a house and six small office buildings on the ground.