This is an old revision of this page, as edited by MartinBotIII (talk | contribs) at 11:47, 18 March 2007 (removing template per Misplaced Pages:Templates for deletion/Log/2007 March 8, Replaced: {{Oligarchs}} → using AWB). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.
Revision as of 11:47, 18 March 2007 by MartinBotIII (talk | contribs) (removing template per Misplaced Pages:Templates for deletion/Log/2007 March 8, Replaced: {{Oligarchs}} → using AWB)(diff) ← Previous revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)Arcadi Alexandrovich Gaydamak (also spelled Arkadi Gaydamak, Russian: Аркадий Александрович Гайдамак, Hebrew: ארקדי גיידמק) (born 1952 in Ukraine (USSR)) is an Israeli billionaire businessman, and member of the wealthy Gaydamak family. Gaydamak holds French and Israeli passports in addition to diplomatic Canadian and Angola passports. He travels in the capacity of a representative of the government of Angola, in order to circumvent warrants for his arrest. His son Alexandre Gaydamak is also a businessman and owner of Portsmouth F.C. in England. In February 2007 he announced the establishment of his own political party, Social Justice.
Biography
Arcadi Gaydamak was born in 1952 in Ukraine, and at the age of 4 moved with his family to Moscow, the capital of the former USSR. At the age of 20, Gaydamak was one of the first Jews to immigrate to Israel from Leonid Brezhnev's Soviet Union. He enrolled in the army, and was drafted to the Israeli Sea Corps. He left Israel some six months later, making his way towards France. He lived in France until the age of 48, occasionally visiting his country of birth, Russia. In December 2000 he decided to flee France as a direct result of allegations concerning illegal arms trading with Angola, tax evasion and money laundering. He consequently settled in Israel, whose courts denied an extradition application made by the French government. In Israel he has also been investigated for alleged money laundering, but denied any responsibility. He currently resides in Israel, where he owns three homes, and travels frequently to Russia and the United States.
Career
In 1973, Gaydamak left Israel and settled in France. Lacking an academic education, he began his early career working as gardener and a bricklayer. In 1976, Gaydamak opened a translation bureau near Paris, servicing Russian commercial delegations visiting France, and made contacts at a number of French companies. By 1982, Gaydamak Translations was a highly successful business, and he opened a branch in Canada. During that period he began pursuing a more lucrative business path in importing and exporting. He used his ties in the Soviet Union to further his business and sequentially formed various business organizations across Europe. Gaydamak wealth is estimated at anywhere from $800 million to more than $4 billion.
Angolagate
Gaydamak spent many years in France, but fled the country when an arrest warrant was issued for him in connection to an arms-dealing scandal known in France as L'Angolagate. He is wanted on two charges; illegal arms dealing with Angola, and tax evasion.
Football clubs and media ownership
In July 10 2005 he announced on his entry into the sports businesses and became the sponsor of the Hapoel Jerusalem basketball team. After about a month he decided to donate $400,000 to the Ikhud Bney Sakhnin football club. On the same day Gaydamak also announced the purchase of 55% of the ownership of Beytar Jerusalem and two days later he announced the acquisition of full ownership of the team. Gaydamak is the patron of several Jewish charities, and is president of the Congress of Jewish Religious Communities and Organizations of Russia, (KEROOR), Russia's oldest religious Jewish umbrella group.
In March 2006, he announced his offer to buy the French newspaper France Soir via his company Moscow News. He had purchased the Russian Moskovskie Novosti newspaper in 2004.
Donations
Gaydamak has donated to many Israeli organizations, of which many are charity and have religious characteristics. He has donated to Magen David Adom, Hatzolah and many others.
Gaydamak also attempted to donate $50 million to the Jewish Agency for Israel and in return become a board member, but as a result of a leak that the Israeli police warned the Jewish Agency not to receive the donation, he has delayed it. A few days later Gaydamak was interrogated over money laundering.
During the 2006 Israel-Lebanon conflict Gaydamak constructed a tent-village on the beach of Nitzanim, that hosted thousands of families who fled the rocket ridden North and had otherwise no place and means to go to. Gaydamak's contributions totaled $15 million (about $500,000 a day) and earned him considerable praise among some Israelis, though they were viewed by others as a populist act, perhaps related to the French extradition demand issued against him. In November 2006, he funded a one-week long vacation in Eilat for hundreds of Sderot residents, who have been under constant Palestinian terror rocket attack for the past two years.
Politics
On February 20, 2007 Gaydamak announced he would found a party based solely on socio-economic issues. The next day he announced its name, Social Justice .
Although Gaydamak has said the organisation will intially be established as a social movement, he noted that it could become a political party at any time, "based on the circumstances." He has stated the movement does not seek ultimate power for itself, but will run in tandem with Benjamin Netanyahu's Likud, hoping to pick up votes from former Likud members alienated by Netanyahu's financial policies. It has been suggested that the party will eventually merge into Likud.
Gaydamak believes the party could win 25 seats in the next elections. However, he apparently does not wish to take a seat in the Knesset, preferring to remain as Party Chairman outside the parliament in a role similar to that of Shas's spiritual leader, Ovadia Yosef.
Gaydamak has expressed his support for a Palestinian state and for Russian President Putin and commended Putin's meetings with Hamas.
References
- "Billionaire Netanyahu-ally Gaydamak to start his own party". Haaretz. 2007-02-20.
- "Arcadi Gaydamak annonce avoir racheté 'France Soir' (Arcadi Gaydamak announces having bought back 'France Soir')". Le Monde. March 14, 2006.
- http://www.nrg.co.il/online/1/ART1/029/098.html
- "Sderot residents vie for trip to Eilat". Jerusalem Post. Nov. 16, 2006.
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