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Government urged to act as £2.5bn Chelsea sale funds remain frozen

The UK government is facing mounting political pressure to unlock £2.5 billion in proceeds from the sale of Chelsea Football Club, as opposition figures warn further delays risk undermining support for Ukraine.

The UK government is facing mounting political pressure to unlock £2.5 billion in proceeds from the sale of Chelsea Football Club, as opposition figures warn further delays risk undermining support for Ukraine.

The funds, frozen since 2022 following the forced sale of the club by sanctioned Russian oligarch Roman Abramovich, remain tied up in a legal and diplomatic dispute over how the money should be distributed. Ministers have now indicated they are preparing to take legal action to resolve the impasse after a March deadline passed without agreement.

Shadow chancellor Sir Mel Stride said the government “must not delay” in taking decisive steps to release the funds, arguing that the money should already have been deployed to support humanitarian efforts linked to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. He warned that, more than two years after the sale, the continued freeze was becoming increasingly difficult to justify given the scale of need on the ground.

Abramovich was compelled to sell Chelsea in May 2022 after being sanctioned by the UK government in response to Vladimir Putin’s invasion. The club was acquired by a consortium led by US investor Todd Boehly in a deal worth £2.5 billion, with the proceeds placed into a UK bank account under strict government oversight.

At the time, Abramovich stated that the funds would be donated to support “all victims of the war in Ukraine”. However, the UK government has maintained that the full sum should be directed specifically towards Ukrainian humanitarian causes, creating a fundamental disagreement that has stalled progress.

Officials now appear to be losing patience. A government spokesperson confirmed that Abramovich had been given a final opportunity to resolve the matter voluntarily but had failed to do so, adding that further steps would now be taken to ensure the original commitments made during the sale are honoured.

The dispute has also been complicated by financial arrangements linked to Fordstam, the company through which Abramovich previously owned Chelsea. Filings suggest that less than £1 billion of the proceeds may ultimately be allocated to a charitable foundation after loan repayments, a position at odds with the government’s expectation that the entire sum should be used for humanitarian purposes.

The situation has become increasingly politically sensitive, particularly as the war in Ukraine continues and international support remains under scrutiny. Critics argue that the delay risks sending the wrong signal at a time when the UK has positioned itself as a leading supporter of Ukraine.

Stride’s intervention reflects broader concerns within Westminster that the issue has dragged on for too long. He pointed out that Labour has now been in power for 18 months without resolving the matter, despite repeated assurances that progress was being made.

The frozen funds represent one of the largest pools of Russian-linked assets held under UK sanctions, and the outcome of the case could set an important precedent for how such assets are treated in future. Legal experts suggest that any court action could hinge on the interpretation of sanctions law, charitable intent and the enforceability of commitments made during the sale process.

The controversy comes against the backdrop of continued scrutiny of Chelsea’s previous ownership. The club was recently fined £11 million and handed a suspended one-year transfer ban over undisclosed payments linked to the Abramovich era, although no players were found to have committed wrongdoing.

For now, the £2.5 billion remains frozen, symbolising both the complexity of sanctions enforcement and the challenges of converting political commitments into tangible outcomes. With ministers now signalling a willingness to escalate the matter through the courts, the next phase of the dispute is likely to be fought in the legal arena rather than through negotiation.

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Government urged to act as £2.5bn Chelsea sale funds remain frozen

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