South Africa to let Russian billionaire's $500 million superyacht dock, despite mayor's request to block entry

Superyacht anchored with Hong Kong in the background.

South Africa will allow a $500 million superyacht linked to sanctioned Russian billionaire Alexey Mordashov to dock in Cape Town, despite a bid by the city's mayor to block its entry.

Key points:

  • The South African government will allow the $500 million Russian superyacht to dock in Cape Town
  • It believed to be owned by Russian billionaire Alexey Mordashov, who is thought to have close ties with Vladimir Putin and is sanctioned by the US and the EU
  • Cape Town's mayor asked his country to block the yacht from docking

On Tuesday, the South African government announced its intention to let the mega yacht, Nord, to dock amid claims that steel and mining magnate Mr Mordashov was seeking a new harbour to shield it from seizure.

A day later, a South African official said Cape Town was perfect for the 141.6-metre-long boat because it has the technical means to maintain luxury yachts that many other harbours do not.

"If you're parking a $500-million asset, you need it looked after properly," the official told the Associated Press, on the condition of anonymity because he's not permitted to speak publicly on the issue.

Vincent Magwenya — spokesman for South African President Cyril Ramaphosa — said there was "no reason" for South Africa to deny the Nord entry as Mr Mordashov was not the subject of United Nations' sanctions — only sanctions imposed unilaterally by the United States and the European Union.

The mega yacht — which left Hong Kong on a journey across the Indian Ocean to South Africa last week — would be allowed to dock in Cape Town harbour, as long as those on board "abide by our immigration laws", Mr Magwenya said.

Mr Mordashov is not believed to be on board the yacht.

"Currently there are no UN-imposed sanctions on the particular individual and, therefore, South Africa has no legal obligation to abide by the sanctions that the US and the EU have decided to impose within specific jurisdictions," Mr Magwenya said. 

Mr Mordashov is thought to have close ties to Russian President Vladimir Putin and was sanctioned by the US and the EU because of the war in Ukraine.

He is the main shareholder and chairman of Severstal, Russia's largest steel and mining company, and one of Russia's richest men, with a net worth of more than $20 billion, according to Bloomberg's Billionaire's Index.

Cape Town mayor Geordin Hill-Lewis said the Russian has benefited financially from the war in Ukraine and was "an accomplice to the unconscionable crimes committed against Ukrainian civilians".

He asked the South African government to block the Nord from docking, eliciting the response from President Ramaphosa's spokesman.

South Africa has adopted a neutral stance on the war in Ukraine, frustrating Western partners, who had hoped that Africa's most-developed economy would also condemn Russia's invasion and act as a leading voice for the continent.

The country abstained from a UN vote condemning Russia's actions and called, instead, for dialogue and diplomacy.

Mr Hill-Lewis is a member of South Africa's main opposition party, which has been fiercely critical of the neutral stance taken by Ramaphosa's government.

The fate of the yacht has captured attention since it arrived in Hong Kong from Vladivostok, Russia, earlier this month, sparking a diplomatic row between the US and Hong Kong authorities over the enforcing of sanctions.

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Sanctioned Russian oligarch Alexey Mordashov allowed to dock superyacht in Cape Town

Before the West imposed sanctions on oligarchs over Vladimir Putin's war in Ukraine, Alexey Mordashov was the richest man in Russia with an estimated net worth of $29.1bn, according to Forbes.

russian yacht cape town

OSINT producer @OliveLineham

Wednesday 26 October 2022 13:27, UK

Nord in Hong Kong last Thursday

A superyacht owned by a sanctioned Russian oligarch will be allowed to dock in South Africa.

The country has "no legal obligation" to abide by sanctions imposed by the United States and the European Union, a spokesman for Cyril Ramaphosa, the president, said.

Nord, a luxury 465ft yacht worth more than $500m, is owned by Alexey Mordashov, a billionaire ally of Vladimir Putin, and will be allowed to dock in Cape Town.

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The case exemplifies the limits of sanctions imposed by the US and the EU in response to Mr Putin's war in Ukraine.

Mordashov was one of several oligarchs targeted with sanctions by the US and EU, but not the United Nations, after the invasion of Ukraine in February for their ties to Mr Putin.

Vincent Magwenya, Mr Ramaphosa's spokesman, said South Africa's obligations on sanctions "relate to only those specifically adopted by the United Nations" - of which it is a founding member.

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  • South Africa

The yacht, which has six decks and a helipad, left Hong Kong last Thursday and is en route to Cape Town, according to MarineTraffic, a maritime tracker.

The decision has been criticised by South African opposition leaders, including the mayor of Cape Town, who urged the government to block Nord's entry.

Vladimir Putin, left, with Alexey Mordashov in 2015. Pic: Alexei Nikolsky/RIA Novosti/Kremlin/Reuters

Geordin Hill-Lewis, a member of the opposition Democratic Alliance party, tweeted: "There is no place in our city for accomplices to, and enablers of, Putin's war."

Mordashov had an estimated net worth of $29.1bn before sanctions hit, according to Forbes, which made him the richest man in Russia.

The yacht docked in Hong Kong after a seven-day voyage from Vladivostok, in the Russian Far East near the border with China, down through the Sea of Japan and the East China Sea.

I have asked Minister Pandor to block the entry of a R9 billion superyacht, owned and sailed by sanctioned Russian oligarch Alexey Mordashov, to Cape Town's port. There is no place in our city for accomplices to, and enablers of, Putin’s war. https://t.co/yTqZGs1Eka pic.twitter.com/MAxOFf267t — Geordin Hill-Lewis (@geordinhl) October 24, 2022

Before its arrival, John Lee, the Beijing-backed leader of Hong Kong, said the authorities would not act on unilateral sanctions imposed on Mordashov by individual jurisdictions.

"We cannot do anything that has no legal basis," said Mr Lee, who himself has been sanctioned by the US for his role in a crackdown on local freedoms.

China, a traditional ally of Russia, has opposed economic sanctions against Russia and refused to condemn Mr Putin's invasion, though last month at the UN General Assembly it called for a negotiated end to the war.

In a statement to Sky News Mr Mordashov said: "It is terrible that Ukrainians and Russians are dying, people are suffering hardships and the economy is collapsing. I sincerely hope a way can be found in the very near future to resolve this conflict.

"I have absolutely nothing to do with the emergence of the current geopolitical tension and I do not understand why the sanctions were imposed on me."

Read more: How a KGB agent from Leningrad rose to the top of the Kremlin Russia could take 10 years to recover from sanctions

Mordashov built his wealth around the Russian steel producer Severstal.

Multiple Russian-owned superyachts have been seized since the start of the war in Ukraine.

In recent months, a number have been moved to parts of the world considered beyond the reach of Western sanctions, including Turkey, parts of Asia and the Caribbean.

Related Topics

South Africa will allow a Russian oligarch to moor his superyacht in Cape Town as it continues on epic global cruise avoiding Western sanctions

  • A $500 million oligarch-owned superyacht has cruised between the Seychelles, Russia, and Hong Kong.
  • The yacht, owned by sanctioned billionaire Alexei Mordashov, is now headed to Cape Town, South Africa.
  • Cape Town's mayor and the South African president are at odds over allowing the yacht to dock.

Insider Today

A $500 million superyacht will be allowed to dock in Cape Town, South Africa despite its Russian oligarch owner being sanctioned by the US, UK and EU. 

Nord, the 465-foot vessel owned by billionaire steel magnate Alexei Mordashov , has made multiple stops across the eastern hemisphere since he was sanctioned in the aftermath of Russia's invasion of Ukraine. 

Data from Marine Traffic shows that Nord left the Seychelles in March before staying in Vladivostok , in the Russian far east, until September 28, when it made its way to Hong Kong . 

At the time, Washington warned Hong Kong against providing a "safe haven" for sanctioned oligarchs, questioning the city state's reputation as an international financial center.

Nord has now left the city state, and is sailing towards South Africa where it is expected to moor on November 9, Marine Traffic data shows. The yacht's last reported position was west of Indonesia on Wednesday, per Spire Maritime .

When it arrives in South Africa, it will be allowed to dock, despite outcry from some in the country.

Related stories

The mayor of Cape Town, Geordin Hill-Lewis, told the Wall Street Journal that the city could become "a new favorite destination for Russians fleeing sanctions in the rest of the world" if Nord is allowed to dock.

Hill-Lewis also said that he had received conflicting reports as to whether Mordashov is on board his superyacht, but the oligarch's spokesperson said he remains in Moscow, per the Journal.

The mayor, a member of South Africa's opposition Democratic Alliance party, added: "South Africa has a moral duty to do what it can to protest unjust war, state terrorism, and the gross violation of human rights."

However, the country's government has rejected his call to turn away Nord, which has two helicopter pads and a swimming pool among other luxuries. 

"South Africa has no legal obligation to abide by sanctions imposed by the US and EU," Vincent Magwenya, a spokesman for South African President Cyril Ramaphosa said, per the BBC.

"South Africa's obligations with respect to sanctions relate only to those that are specifically adopted by the United Nations."

South Africa was among the 35 countries which abstained from a UN resolution in March which demanded the withdrawal of Russian troops from Ukraine.

Mordashov's smaller superyacht, Lady M, was seized by Italian authorities in March due to EU sanctions. Bloomberg also reported that Nord changed its flag from Russia to the Cayman Islands in June.

russian yacht cape town

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South Africa to let Russian billionaire’s superyacht dock

FILE - In this image taken from a video footage run by TVB, the megayacht Nord, center, worth over $500 million, is seen off Hong Kong Island outside Victoria Harbour on Friday, Oct. 7, 2022. The Nord, linked to sanctioned Russian tycoon Alexey Mordashov, left Hong Kong for South Africa Thursday, Oct. 20, 2022, nearly two weeks after the U.S. chastised the city for operating as a “safe haven” for sanctioned individuals. (TVB via AP, File)

FILE - In this image taken from a video footage run by TVB, the megayacht Nord, center, worth over $500 million, is seen off Hong Kong Island outside Victoria Harbour on Friday, Oct. 7, 2022. The Nord, linked to sanctioned Russian tycoon Alexey Mordashov, left Hong Kong for South Africa Thursday, Oct. 20, 2022, nearly two weeks after the U.S. chastised the city for operating as a “safe haven” for sanctioned individuals. (TVB via AP, File)

FILE - In this image taken from a video footage run by TVB, the megayacht Nord, worth over $500 million, is seen off Hong Kong Island outside Victoria Harbour on Friday, Oct. 7, 2022. The Nord, linked to sanctioned Russian tycoon Alexey Mordashov, left Hong Kong for South Africa Thursday, Oct. 20, 2022, nearly two weeks after the U.S. chastised the city for operating as a “safe haven” for sanctioned individuals. (TVB via AP, File)

Russian President Vladimir Putin leads a meeting of the Coordination Council via videoconference in Moscow, Russia, Tuesday, Oct. 25, 2022. Speaking via video link at a meeting of the council he created last week to help coordinate the delivery pf weapons and supplies to the troops fighting in Ukraine, Putin noted that the country is facing “new serious challenges,” and emphasized the need to “gain higher tempo in all areas.” (Alexei Babushkin, Sputnik, Kremlin Pool Photo via AP)

FILE - Recruits carry ammunition during a military training at a firing range in the Rostov-on-Don region in southern Russia, Oct. 4, 2022. Since Russian President Vladimir Putin announced his mobilization on Sept. 21 for the war in Ukraine, independent media, human rights activists and draftees themselves have painted a bleak picture of a haphazard, chaotic and ethnically biased effort to round up as many men as possible and push them quickly to the front, regardless of skill or training. (AP Photo/File)

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CAPE TOWN, South Africa (AP) — Cape Town port is ideally suited to host a $500 million superyacht linked to sanctioned Russian billionaire Alexey Mordashov, a South African official said Wednesday, after the country announced its intention to let the vessel dock there despite a bid by the city’s mayor to block its entry.

The South African government made the announcement Tuesday amid claims steel and mining magnate Alexey Mordashov is seeking a new harbor to shield the superyacht from seizure.

The official said Cape Town was perfect for the Nord because it has the technical means to maintain luxury yachts that many other harbors don’t.

“If you’re parking a $500-million asset, you need it looked after properly,” the official told the Associated Press on condition of anonymity because he’s not permitted to speak publicly on the issue.

Vincent Magwenya, spokesman for South African President Cyril Ramaphosa, said Tuesday that there was “no reason” for South Africa to deny the Nord entry as Mordashov wasn’t the subject of United Nations sanctions, only sanctions imposed unilaterally by the United States and the European Union.

The Nord, which left Hong Kong on a journey across the Indian Ocean to South Africa last week, would be allowed to dock in Cape Town harbor as long as those on board “abide by our immigration laws,” Magwenya said.

Mordashov is not believed to be on board the yacht.

“Currently there are no U.N.-imposed sanctions on the particular individual and therefore South Africa has no legal obligation to abide by the sanctions that the U.S. and the EU have decided to impose within specific jurisdictions,” Magwenya told reporters in the South African capital, Pretoria.

Mordashov is thought to have close ties to Russian President Vladimir Putin and was sanctioned by the U.S. and the EU because of the war in Ukraine. He is the main shareholder and chairman of Severstal, Russia’s largest steel and mining company, and one of Russia’s richest men, with a net worth of over $20 billion, according to Bloomberg’s Billionaire’s Index.

Cape Town mayor Geordin Hill-Lewis said Mordashov has benefited financially from the war in Ukraine and is “an accomplice to the unconscionable crimes committed against Ukrainian civilians.” Hill-Lewis had asked the South African government to block the Nord from docking, eliciting the response from President Ramaphosa’s spokesman.

South Africa has adopted a neutral stance on the war in Ukraine, frustrating Western partners who had hoped that Africa’s most developed economy would also condemn Russia’s invasion and act as a leading voice for the continent. South Africa abstained from a U.N. vote condemning Russia’s actions and called, instead, for dialogue and diplomacy.

Hill-Lewis is a member of South Africa’s main opposition party, which has been fiercely critical of the neutral stance taken by Ramaphosa’s government.

“It must be said that, so far, our country’s foreign policy conduct in relation to Russia’s illegal, imperialist war has been nothing less than shameful,” Hill-Lewis said.

The Nord flies a Russian flag, is 141.6 meters (465 feet) long and has two helipads, a swimming pool and 20 cabins. It sailed out of Hong Kong after the U.S. accused that city of operating as a safe haven for sanctioned persons. It is expected to arrive in Cape Town on Nov. 9, according to the Marine Traffic shipping website.

The fate of the yacht has captured attention since it arrived in Hong Kong from Vladivostok, Russia, early this month, sparking a diplomatic row between the U.S. and Hong Kong authorities over the enforcing of sanctions.

Russian oligarchs have been looking for suitable harbors for their luxury yachts since they were targeted by American and European sanctions over the war in Ukraine. Some have also found new homes in Turkey, which has maintained diplomatic ties with Russia.

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South Africa to let Russian billionaire's superyacht dock

South Africa to let Russian billionaire's superyacht dock

South Africa

Cape Town port is ideally suited to host a $500 million superyacht linked to sanctioned Russian billionaire Alexey Mordashov, a South African official said Wednesday after the country announced its intention to let the vessel dock there despite a bid by the city's mayor to block its entry.

The South African government made the announcement Tuesday amid claims that steel and mining magnate Alexey Mordashov is seeking a new harbor to shield the superyacht from seizure.

The official said Cape Town was perfect for the Nord because it has the technical means to maintain luxury yachts that many other harbors don't.

"If you're parking a $500-million asset, you need it looked after properly," the official told the Associated Press on condition of anonymity because he's not permitted to speak publicly on the issue.

Vincent Magwenya, the spokesman for South African President Cyril Ramaphosa, said Tuesday that there was "no reason" for South Africa to deny the Nord entry as Mordashov wasn't the subject of United Nations sanctions, only sanctions imposed unilaterally by the United States and the European Union.

The Nord, which left Hong Kong on a journey across the Indian Ocean to South Africa last week, would be allowed to dock in Cape Town harbor as long as those on board "abide by our immigration laws," Magwenya said.

Mordashov is not believed to be on board the yacht.

"Currently there are no U.N.-imposed sanctions on the particular individual and therefore South Africa has no legal obligation to abide by the sanctions that the U.S. and the EU have decided to impose within specific jurisdictions," Magwenya told reporters in the South African capital, Pretoria.

Mordashov is thought to have close ties to Russian President Vladimir Putin and was sanctioned by the U.S. and the EU because of the war in Ukraine. He is the main shareholder and chairman of Severstal, Russia's largest steel and mining company, and one of Russia's richest men, with a net worth of over $20 billion, according to Bloomberg's Billionaire's Index.

Cape Town mayor Geordin Hill-Lewis said Mordashov has benefited financially from the war in Ukraine and is "an accomplice to the unconscionable crimes committed against Ukrainian civilians." Hill-Lewis had asked the South African government to block the Nord from docking, eliciting the response from President Ramaphosa's spokesman.

South Africa has adopted a neutral stance on the war in Ukraine, frustrating Western partners who had hoped that Africa's most developed economy would also condemn Russia's invasion and act as a leading voice for the continent. South Africa abstained from a U.N. vote condemning Russia's actions and called, instead, for dialogue and diplomacy.

Hill-Lewis is a member of South Africa's main opposition party, which has been fiercely critical of the neutral stance taken by Ramaphosa's government.

"It must be said that, so far, our country's foreign policy conduct in relation to Russia's illegal, imperialist war has been nothing less than shameful," Hill-Lewis said.

The Nord flies a Russian flag, is 141.6 meters (465 feet) long, and has two helipads, a swimming pool, and 20 cabins. It sailed out of Hong Kong after the U.S. accused that city of operating as a safe haven for sanctioned persons. It is expected to arrive in Cape Town on Nov. 9, according to the Marine Traffic shipping website.

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South Africa to let Russian billionaire's superyacht dock

South africa will allow a $500 million superyacht linked to sanctioned russian billionaire alexey mordashov to dock in cape town despite attempts from the city’s mayor to get its entry blocked, article bookmarked.

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Cape Town port is ideally suited to host a $500 million superyacht linked to sanctioned Russian billionaire Alexey Mordashov, a South African official said Wednesday, after the country announced its intention to let the vessel dock there despite a bid by the city's mayor to block its entry.

The South African government made the announcement Tuesday amid claims steel and mining magnate Alexey Mordashov is seeking a new harbor to shield the superyacht from seizure.

The official said Cape Town was perfect for the Nord because it has the technical means to maintain luxury yachts that many other harbors don't.

“If you’re parking a $500-million asset, you need it looked after properly,” the official told the Associated Press on condition of anonymity because he's not permitted to speak publicly on the issue.

Vincent Magwenya, spokesman for South African President Cyril Ramaphosa , said Tuesday that there was “no reason” for South Africa to deny the Nord entry as Mordashov wasn't the subject of United Nations sanctions, only sanctions imposed unilaterally by the United States and the European Union.

The Nord, which left Hong Kong on a journey across the Indian Ocean to South Africa last week, would be allowed to dock in Cape Town harbor as long as those on board "abide by our immigration laws," Magwenya said.

Mordashov is not believed to be on board the yacht.

“Currently there are no U.N.-imposed sanctions on the particular individual and therefore South Africa has no legal obligation to abide by the sanctions that the U.S. and the EU have decided to impose within specific jurisdictions,” Magwenya told reporters in the South African capital, Pretoria.

Mordashov is thought to have close ties to Russian President Vladimir Putin and was sanctioned by the U.S. and the EU because of the war in Ukraine . He is the main shareholder and chairman of Severstal, Russia’s largest steel and mining company, and one of Russia’s richest men, with a net worth of over $20 billion, according to Bloomberg's Billionaire's Index.

Cape Town mayor Geordin Hill-Lewis said Mordashov has benefited financially from the war in Ukraine and is “an accomplice to the unconscionable crimes committed against Ukrainian civilians.” Hill-Lewis had asked the South African government to block the Nord from docking, eliciting the response from President Ramaphosa's spokesman.

South Africa has adopted a neutral stance on the war in Ukraine, frustrating Western partners who had hoped that Africa’s most developed economy would also condemn Russia’s invasion and act as a leading voice for the continent. South Africa abstained from a U.N. vote condemning Russia’s actions and called, instead, for dialogue and diplomacy.

Hill-Lewis is a member of South Africa’s main opposition party, which has been fiercely critical of the neutral stance taken by Ramaphosa's government.

“It must be said that, so far, our country’s foreign policy conduct in relation to Russia’s illegal, imperialist war has been nothing less than shameful,” Hill-Lewis said.

The Nord flies a Russian flag, is 141.6 meters (465 feet) long and has two helipads, a swimming pool and 20 cabins. It sailed out of Hong Kong after the U.S. accused that city of operating as a safe haven for sanctioned persons. It is expected to arrive in Cape Town on Nov. 9, according to the Marine Traffic shipping website.

The fate of the yacht has captured attention since it arrived in Hong Kong from Vladivostok, Russia, early this month, sparking a diplomatic row between the U.S. and Hong Kong authorities over the enforcing of sanctions.

Russian oligarchs have been looking for suitable harbors for their luxury yachts since they were targeted by American and European sanctions over the war in Ukraine. Some have also found new homes in Turkey, which has maintained diplomatic ties with Russia.

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A Russian Oligarch’s $500 Million Megayacht Has Avoided Seizure for Months. It Was Just Spotted in the Maldives.

The vessel stopped transmitting its location en route to cape town. now it's in the indian ocean., dana givens, dana givens's most recent stories.

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The Nord superyacht in Hong Kong, China, on Friday, Oct. 14, 2022. The Nord, a $500 million megayacht that's connected to sanctioned Russian tycoon Alexey Mordashov, has mysteriously ended up in Hong Kong after a more than week-long voyage from the port of Vladivostok where it was anchored since March. Photographer: Lam Yik/Bloomberg via Getty Image

Nord might just be the most elusive superyacht on the high seas.

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Mordashov—the largest shareholder in the steelmaker Severstal and the third-richest man in Russia —has been sanctioned by the European Union, the United Kingdom and the United States in response to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. The oligarch maintains he has had no involvement in Russian politics and has been fighting the sanctions since May.

However, like other sanctioned Russians, his assets continue to be seized by Western governments. In fact, Mordashov lost his 215-foot  superyacht ,  Lady M , back in March after it was confiscated by Italian police. In response, billionaires have started relocating their high-priced ships to safer waters.

South Africa initially seemed like a good option. President Cyril Ramaphosa previously said “South Africa has no legal obligation to abide by sanctions imposed by the US and EU.” However, the mayor of Cape Town opposed welcoming Nord , adding there may be protests from the port city’s large Ukrainian community.

The Maldives do not currently have extradition treaties with the US. However, the country is a member of the United Nations, which has vehemently denounced Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. Let’s see if Nord ends up dropping anchor.

Dana Givens is a former digital staff writer for Robb Report. Before joining the team, she was a seasoned freelancer covering travel and lifestyle topics for outlets such as Business Insider, Fodor's…

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A picture taken on March 3, 2022 in a shipyard of La Ciotat, near Marseille, southern France, shows a yacht, Amore Vero, owned by a company linked to Igor Sechin, chief executive of Russian energy giant Rosneft. – The French government on March 3 said it had seized in La Ciotat a superyacht owned by a company linked to Igor Sechin, chief executive of Russian energy giant Rosneft and close confidant of the Russian President, as part of the implementation of European Union sanctions against Russian invasion of Ukraine. (Photo by NICOLAS TUCAT / AFP)

SA will now allow Russian oligarch’s yacht to dock in Cape Town

City of Cape Town Mayor had pleaded with DIRCO Minister Naledi Pandor to block the entry of the Russian oligarch’s R9 billion yacht.

Nokwanda Ncwane

Presidency spokesperson Vincent Magwenya has confirmed that South Africa will allow the yacht owned by Russian tycoon Alexey Mordashov to dock in Cape Town on Thursday, 27 October.

This, after City of Cape Town Mayor Geordin Hill-Lewis had written to the Department of International Relations and Cooperation (DIRCO) Minister Naledi Pandor seeking to block the yacht.

RUSSIAN YACHT WILL BE ALLOWED TO DOCK IN CAPE TOWN

The R9 billion superyacht belonging to Russian oligarch Alexe Mordashov departed Hong Kong last week, bound for Cape Town. It is believed that Mordashov is aboard the vessel and intends to enter South Africa through the port of Cape Town.

Mordashov is reportedly chairman of the company Severgroup, which is a major shareholder of Bank Rossiya, of which he personally owns a considerable share and is the main shareholder and chairman of Severstal, Russia’s biggest steel company.

In his letter, Hill-Lewis said South Africa has a moral duty to do what it can to protest unjust war, state terrorism, and the gross violation of human rights saying the country ought to stand up against expansionist imperialism wherever it rears its ugly head. This is especially so, in light of the South Africa’s own painful history of imperialism.

South Africa should not be offering sanctuary to sanctioned Russian oligarchs. We call on @DIRCO_ZA to uphold international sanctions and deny the yacht entry. Putin’s war accomplices are not welcome in Cape Town. https://t.co/KqrSeq67zm — Geordin Hill-Lewis (@geordinhl) October 22, 2022

Hill-Lewis said the international community has recognised Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and its annexation of four areas of Ukrainian territory by force as illegal.

“Clear evidence exists for war crimes and crimes against humanity having been committed by the Russian state against the Ukrainian people, including deliberate attacks against civilian targets, massacres of civilians, torture, and the rape of women and children. Many thousands of people have died and many more have had their homes destroyed and lives torn apart,” he said.

Magwenya said there is no reason to prevent the entry of individuals who abide by the country’s immigration.

“South African obligations with respect to sanctions relate to only those specifically adopted by the United Nations. Currently there are no UN imposed sanctions on the particular individual, therefore South Africa has no legal obligation to abide by sanctions that the US and EU have decided to impose within specific jurisdictions,” Magwenya said.

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Russian Super Yacht Nord is Heading to Cape Town, South Africa

Home » Russian Super Yacht Nord is Heading to Cape Town, South Africa

Russian Super Yacht Nord is Heading to Cape Town, South Africa

A super yacht worth around $521-million and owned by a sanctioned Russian oligarch is heading for Cape Town, according to a CNN report and details on MarineTraffic.com. MV Nord, which is known as one of the world’s most luxurious megayachts, had been spotted in Hong Kong earlier this month (11 Oct), after sailing from Russia. […]

Russian Super Yacht Nord is Heading to Cape Town, South Africa

A super yacht worth around $521-million and owned by a sanctioned Russian oligarch is heading for Cape Town, according to a CNN report and details on MarineTraffic.com.

MV Nord, which is known as one of the world’s most luxurious megayachts, had been spotted in Hong Kong earlier this month (11 Oct), after sailing from Russia. Yesterday the BBC reported that Hong Kong authorities refused to seize the vessel because the oligarch is under Western sanctions (imposed by the UK, US and EU) and not “unilateral” ones imposed by the United Nations.

According to MarineTraffic.com , Nord left Hong Kong on Thursday (20 Oct) and is expected to arrive in Cape Town on 9 November.

The owner – Alexei Mordashov – is not believed to be on board the boat. Mordashov is one of Russia’s richest oligarchs as chairman of Severstal conglomerate which has interests in metal, energy and mining companies. He is said to be close to the country’s President Vladimir Putin, and the sanctions follow Russia’s attack on the Ukraine.

Nord can accommodate more than 24 guests, and a crew of 40. (According to Yacht Harbour the boat can actually take 36 guests and has 18 cabins.) Like many super yachts, it has two helicopter platforms (as well as a hangar), swimming pool, elevators, gym, sauna and cinema.

The 142m boat was delivered to Mordashov in 2021. He also owns MV Lady M.

South Africa, which has encouraged negotiation rather than sanctions against Russia, shared a long and close relationship with the country. About 10 days ago, SA again abstained from a UN vote on Russia, this time regarding its annexation of Ukraine territories. Only five countries, including Russia, voted against it; while 143 countries voted in favour of the resolution. Speaking in the US on a recent trip, President Cyril Ramaphosa said the country, and other countries in Africa, refuse to be “bullied” into choosing sides between Russia and Ukraine.

South Africa is a member of BRICS (Brazil, Russia, India, China and SA), a group of strong emerging economies who meet at least once a year.

Several other Russian superyachts have already been seized.

WATCH Nord: The World’s Most Luxurious Megayacht

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No Cape Town berthing request (yet) for Russian superyacht

russian yacht cape town

Transnet National Ports Authority (TNPA) says there has been no berthing request for Russian superyacht Nord, which was reportedly scheduled to arrive in Cape Town next week.

The $500m (about R9bn) superyacht is said to be owned by Russian steel tycoon Alexey Mordashov, who has been sanctioned by the UN. 

The Victoria & Alfred Waterfront, which manages a private marina inside the Port of Cape Town, has also not received a request, it confirmed this week.

News of the 141m superyacht’s impending arrival in the city caused a political stir last week when Cape Town mayor Geordin Hill-Lewis called for the vessel to be blocked on moral grounds. However, the presidency subsequently insisted it had no right to do so due to South Africa's neutral stance regarding Russia’s war with Ukraine.

South Africa, Russia and China are also involved in a joint naval training exercise in Durban, provoking further criticism from those who believe the country should oppose Russia’s invasion of its neighbour.

“According to the standard shipping process, TNPA must receive a notification of arrival from a vessel agent 72 hours prior to the estimated time of arrival, which allows TNPA and other shipping authorities to process the berthing request and the necessary clearances,” TNPA said.

Foreign media reports last month said after departing from Hong Kong, the vessel registered that it expected to arrive in Cape Town on November 9. However, subsequent reports suggested its location transponders had been switched off, cloaking its movements.

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SA’s foreign policy faces the $8.5bn energy question over Russia’s war

‘no legal obligation’ to bar russian tycoon alexey mordashov’s yacht from entering local waters, says presidency, sanctioned russian mogul’s mega yacht is sailing to cape town, hong kong leader says 'no legal basis' to act on russian superyacht.

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Superyacht headed for Cape Town has literally gone off the radar

Superyacht headed for Cape Town has literally gone off the radar

Nord, the luxury superyacht belonging to sanctioned Russian oligarch Alexey Mordashov, left Hong Kong on 20 October and, according to the yacht’s automatic identification system (AIS), was scheduled to arrive in Cape Town tomorrow, 9 November. But the vessel has literally gone off the radar.

Also read : Sanctioned oligarch’s R10 billion yacht heading for Cape Town

The Transnet Port Authority told Business Insider that it has not yet received any written berthing request for the yacht, and the Waterfront has not received an application for Nord to moor in its waters.

The yacht is no longer traceable and went dark by turning off its location transponders in waters northwest of Indonesia on 26 October. The last known location of the vessel is reported as passing through the Strait of Malacca around 26 October, cruising at a speed of 17 knots in calm waters.

The AIS on vessels of 300 gross tonnages and larger should always remain switched on as a measure of safety and security. The AIS system is only allowed to be switched off in situations of imminent danger or if the master is certain that the signal will compromise the safety and security of the vessel. Deliberately turning off the AIS compromises the safety of all vessels at sea.

Also read :

Video: inside Mordashov’s megayacht en route to Cape Town if(window.isMobile != null || window.isTablet != null){ document.write(' '); document.write(' '); googletag.cmd.push(function() { googletag.display('dfp-300x250-3'); }); document.write(' '); }

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Article written by Adrienne Bredeveldt

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Cape Town-Headed Russian Oligarch Superyacht Vanishes

09 nov 2022 by jasmine stone in cape town , lifestyle , politics , russia , south africa.

russian yacht cape town

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[imagesource: Lam Yik / Bloomberg]

The 141-metre Nord superyacht, which was sanctioned by the EU, the UK, and US after Russia decided to invade Ukraine, was due to dock in Cape Town Harbour today after setting sail from Hong Kong.

Despite the best efforts of Cape Town mayor Geordin Hill-Lewis, the South African government gave the all-clear for the R9 billion behemoth, owned by Russian Alexey Mordashov , to pull in.

You’re unlikely to see an ANC welcoming party at the harbour, however, because Nord appears to have vanished into thin air.

Business Insider SA first broke the news:

The plan was to arrive in the city on Wednesday, but it is unclear where the yacht is now. By mid-morning on Tuesday, the Transnet Port Authority told Business Insider South Africa, it had not yet received any written berthing request from the Nord. And by Monday afternoon, the Waterfront Marina had not received an application for the vessel to take up a berth there.

In order to dock, vessels are required to submit a berthing request 72 hours before the estimated time of arrival.

On October 26, Nord went ‘dark’ – meaning it turned off its location transponders – while in Indonesia.

Because of this, the yacht cannot be tracked by any of the numerous online vessel tracking services and there is no information available regarding its voyage.

Those who want to know more have had to rely on unverified scraps of information, such as a possible sighting last week off the coast of the Maldives.

The 142m long, five-deck beast might already be in South African waters, but without the AIS info we just don’t know for sure. We don’t even know if the original AIS [automatic identification systems] information that indicated that Cape Town was the destination was not fake, because it was not confirmed by anyone.

Maybe we’ve all been duped and Cape Town was thrown out as a red herring.

Either way, the fact that nobody can seem to locate a 141-metre superyacht seems more than a little odd.

[source: businsider ]

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  4. SA will allow Russian oligarch to dock super yacht in Cape Town

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  1. A $500 Million Russian Yacht Has Been Allowed to Dock in South Africa

    After making waves on an international scale, Alexey Mordashov's $500 million megayacht appears to have found safe haven in South Africa . Nord will be allowed to dock in Cape Town, despite the ...

  2. Where is Russian oligarch's yacht Nord that was supposed to dock in

    The yacht was seen in the Maldives in December 2021 and January 2022 just before Russia invaded Ukraine. Last month, Cape Town mayor Geordin Hill-Lewis called on Minister of International ...

  3. South Africa to let Russian billionaire's $500 million superyacht dock

    The South African government will allow the $500 million Russian superyacht to dock in Cape Town; ... The mega yacht — which left Hong Kong on a journey across the Indian Ocean to South Africa ...

  4. Ukraine war: South Africa row over Russian superyacht's arrival

    The luxury yacht is expected to arrive in Cape Town in the next few weeks, it is not known how long it will be allowed to stay. Prior to the war, Mr Mordashov was Russia's wealthiest man.

  5. Sanctioned Russian oligarch Alexey Mordashov allowed to dock superyacht

    Nord, a luxury 465ft yacht worth more than $500m, is owned by Alexey Mordashov, a billionaire ally of Vladimir Putin, and will be allowed to dock in Cape Town.

  6. Russian Oligarch's Superyacht Continues World Tour, Docking in SA

    Advertisement. A $500 million superyacht will be allowed to dock in Cape Town, South Africa despite its Russian oligarch owner being sanctioned by the US, UK and EU. Nord, the 465-foot vessel ...

  7. Russian Billionaire Alexey Mordashov's Nord Yacht Arrives in Cape Town

    Russian tycoon Alexey Mordashov 's $500 million superyacht is due to arrive in Cape Town after sailing more than 7,000 nautical miles from Hong Kong, seeking safe harbor from sanctions that have ...

  8. South Africa to let Russian billionaire's superyacht dock

    CAPE TOWN, South Africa (AP) — Cape Town port is ideally suited to host a $500 million superyacht linked to sanctioned Russian billionaire Alexey Mordashov, a South African official said Wednesday, after the country announced its intention to let the vessel dock there despite a bid by the city's mayor to block its entry.

  9. South Africa to let Russian billionaire's superyacht dock

    Russia's invasion of Ukraine. Cyril Ramaphosa. Cape Town port is ideally suited to host a $500 million superyacht linked to sanctioned Russian billionaire Alexey Mordashov, a South African ...

  10. South Africa to let Russian billionaire's superyacht dock

    South Africa will allow a $500 million superyacht linked to sanctioned Russian billionaire Alexey Mordashov to dock in Cape Town despite attempts from the city's mayor to get its entry blocked

  11. Russian superyacht Nord may have given Cape Town a wide berth

    Russian superyacht Nord may have given Cape Town a wide berth. The Nord superyacht in Hong Kong, China, on 14 October 2022. (Photo: Lam Yik / Bloomberg via Getty Images) By Peter Fabricius. Follow ...

  12. Block Russian billionaire's yacht from Cape Town port, advises the

    Bloomberg recently reported that Mordashov's 140m-long, multi-deck super-yacht, Nord, departed for Cape Town from Hong Kong last week. Pavel Isaev, listed online as Mordashov's adviser, had ...

  13. Sanctioned Russian businessman's R9 billion superyacht gets green light

    The mogul's 142-meter Nord passed north of Banda Aceh, Indonesia, on Tuesday and is expected to arrive in Cape Town on 9 November, ship-tracking data compiled by Bloomberg shows.

  14. The vessel stopped transmitting its location en route to Cape Town. Now

    A Russian Oligarch's $500 Million Megayacht Has Avoided Seizure for Months. It Was Just Spotted in the Maldives. The vessel stopped transmitting its location en route to Cape Town. Now it's in ...

  15. Russian billionaire's yacht arrives in SA today

    Russian billionaire's yacht set to reach Cape Town today. The Nord Yacht is a vessel worth something in the region of R10 billion. It comes with multiple stories, its own helipad, and more ...

  16. SA will now allow Russian oligarch's yacht to dock in Cape Town

    City of Cape Town Mayor had pleaded with DIRCO Minister Naledi Pandor to block the entry of the Russian oligarch's R9 billion yacht. by Nokwanda Ncwane 26-10-2022 11:08

  17. Russian Super Yacht Nord is Heading to Cape Town, South Africa

    A super yacht worth around $521-million and owned by a sanctioned Russian oligarch is heading for Cape Town, according to a CNN report and details on MarineTraffic.com.. MV Nord, which is known as one of the world's most luxurious megayachts, had been spotted in Hong Kong earlier this month (11 Oct), after sailing from Russia.

  18. South Africa Urged to Deny Russian Billionaire's Yacht Entry

    The 465-foot superyacht Nord, owned by sanctioned Russian oligarch Alexei Mordashov, is seen in Hong Kong, Oct. 20, 2022. Cape Town —. Cape Town Mayor Geordin Hill-Lewis has urged the South ...

  19. No Cape Town berthing request (yet) for Russian superyacht

    Sanctioned Russian mogul's mega yacht is sailing to Cape Town After mysteriously sailing into Hong Kong two weeks ago, Russian tycoon Alexey Mordashov's $500m superyacht has departed for South ...

  20. Superyacht headed for Cape Town has literally gone off the radar

    Published by Adrienne Bredeveldt on November 8, 2022. Nord, the luxury superyacht belonging to sanctioned Russian oligarch Alexey Mordashov, left Hong Kong on 20 October and, according to the yacht's automatic identification system (AIS), was scheduled to arrive in Cape Town tomorrow, 9 November. But the vessel has literally gone off the radar.

  21. Cape Town wants to block sanctioned Russian businessman's R9 billion

    Cape Town mayor Geordin Hill-Lewis is moving to block a sanctioned R9 billion superyacht - owned by Russian businessman Alexey Mordashov - from landing in the Mother City.

  22. Cape Town-Headed Russian Oligarch Superyacht Vanishes

    The 141-metre Nord superyacht, which was sanctioned by the EU, the UK, and US after Russia decided to invade Ukraine, was due to dock in Cape Town Harbour today after setting sail from Hong Kong. Despite the best efforts of Cape Town mayor Geordin Hill-Lewis, the South African government gave the all-clear for the R9 billion behemoth, owned by ...