The British arm of publisher HarperCollins has apologized to Russian billionaire Roman Abramovich after settling a libel lawsuit filed over a book it released last year on Russian President Vladimir Putin’s relationship with the country’s oligarchs.
Wp Get the full experience.Choose your plan ArrowRight
“Putin’s People” author Catherine Belton, an investigative reporter for Reuters, had written that the president ordered Abramovich to buy Chelsea, a London-based soccer club. The book included a denial from the billionaire, who said the 2003 purchase was not carried out at anyone’s direction, but HarperCollins said new editions of the book would have “a more detailed explanation” of Abramovich’s motivations.
The publisher also acknowledged that the claim in the book was made on the basis of statements made by two unidentified individuals and Sergei Pugachev, a financier who used to be in Putin’s inner circle but now lives in exile.
Advertisement
Story continues below advertisement
In a statement, HarperCollins — a division of the Murdoch-family-controlled News Corp — and Belton apologized for “aspects of the book [that] were not as clear as they would have liked them to have been.” Belton separately said that the claim on the Chelsea purchase “has not been admitted to be false” and new editions would make “clear to all how minor any amendments are.”
A spokesperson for Abramovich, who served as a Russian Far East governor in the early 2000s, said in a statement that the 55-year-old billionaire was “pleased” to have received the apology and welcomes changes made to some 1,700 words in Belton’s book.
“Putin’s People” has received widespread acclaim — and stirred controversy — since its release. In a review, The Washington Post called it “an outstanding account of Putin’s Russia,” in which Belton “builds a strong case against Putin’s corruption and the bald hypocrisy of his propaganda.” Belton, the former Moscow correspondent for the Financial Times of London, this year won a prize named after a Russian anti-corruption lawyer who was beaten and died mysteriously in prison.
Advertisement
Story continues below advertisement
The book has also drawn lawsuits from three other Russian billionaires and Rosneft, a Russian state-controlled energy company. A British judge ruled last month that three of the four passages Rosneft contested were not defamatory.
The same judge, Amanda Tipples, said Belton’s claim on Abramovich’s Chelsea purchase had defamatory meaning because readers could be left with the impression that it was a tool to expand Russian influence in Britain, according to Reuters. The ruling did not include judgment on whether the claim was true.
Under English law, a claim can be found defamatory if it diminishes a subject’s reputation within their community, said Jelena Gligorijevic, a media law expert at the Australian National University. The burden to prove that such a claim is factual then falls on the defendant, she said.
Advertisement
Story continues below advertisement
Belton’s book, which said late Russian tycoon Boris ??Berezovsky was an owner of Sibneft, a major oil producer, will also be amended to indicate that a British court had found the claim to be untrue. HarperCollins said it would make a charitable donation due to the “error” but has not been asked to offer monetary compensation for other contested passages.
How U.S. sanctions take a hidden toll on Russian oligarchs
After the fall of the Soviet Union, London became a hub for wealthy members of the Russian diaspora. Relations between Russia and Britain have cooled significantly in recent years, however, particularly after a Cold War nerve agent was used to poison a former double-agent and his daughter in southern England in 2018.
Critics have accused Russian oligarchs of “libel tourism,” or taking advantage of Britain’s relatively strict speech and publication laws, to silence unfriendly reporting. The country’s Parliament in 2013 clamped down on potential abuses of such laws, two years after the United States passed legislation to shield U.S.-based writers from rulings in legal systems that have less rigorous free speech protections.
Advertisement
Story continues below advertisement
Since Abramovich’s purchase, Chelsea, the current European men’s soccer champion, has transitioned from being a relative also-ran to one of Britain’s glitzier and more successful sports teams.
Read more:
Is Russia all out of oligarchs? It says it is.
Britain targets Guardian newspaper over intelligence leaks related to Edward Snowden
British High Court rules in favor of U.S. extradition of Julian Assange