As Russia’s invasion of Ukraine surpasses its two-month mark, a rising variety of Russian oligarchs are publicly demanding President Vladimir Putin cease his conflict.
Below is a full listing of each Russian oligarch who has spoken out towards the Russian chief’s conflict, which started on February 24.
Oleg Tinkov
Billionaire Oleg Tinkov, maybe essentially the most outspoken critic of the Russia-Ukraine conflict, based Russia’s Tinkoff Bank in 2006. Born in Siberia’s Leninsk-Kuznetsky, the 54-year-old is at present receiving remedy for most cancers. He has denied having a detailed relationship with the Kremlin and Putin.
“I don’t see ANY beneficiary of this crazy war! Innocent people and soldiers are dying,” Tinkov, who has been focused by western sanctions, wrote in plenty of Instagram posts. “How will the army be good, if everything else in the country is shit and mired in [nepotism] and servility?”
He described Putin’s invasion as “unthinkable and unacceptable,” and known as for cash to be spent on most cancers analysis “not on war…We are against this war!”

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Tinkov mentioned 90 % of Russians have been towards the invasion and mentioned in an Instagram publish “morons in any country are 10%.”
“I don’t see a SINGLE beneficiary of this insane war! Innocent people and soldiers are dying,” Tinkov wrote.
Tinkoff, the financial institution Tinkov based however is now not the bulk stakeholder in, shortly distanced itself from him following his condemnation of the conflict, saying that it could not touch upon his “private opinion” and that he now not made choices relating to operations throughout corporations underneath the Tinkoff model.
“He is not a Tinkoff employee,” Tinkoff Bank mentioned in an announcement.
Roman Abramovich
As calls grew for Russian tycoon Roman Abramovich to be sanctioned over his hyperlinks to Putin, the 55-year-old introduced on March 3 the sale of Chelsea Football Club. He has denied having monetary hyperlinks to the Kremlin.

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Abramovich has been seen collaborating in peace negotiations between Ukraine and Russia. On March 23, the Wall Street Journal reported that Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky requested U.S. President Joe Biden to not sanction Abramovich as a result of he “might prove important as a go-between with Russia in helping to negotiate peace.”
Oleg Deripaska
Putin ally and founding father of the Rusal aluminum firm, Oleg Deripaska, was hit by sanctions on March 10 by the UK authorities. The U.S. beforehand sanctioned him in 2018 over Russian interference within the 2016 election.
Deripaska wrote on the Telegram messaging app on February 27, days after Putin invaded neighboring Ukraine: “Peace is very important! Negotiations must begin as soon as possible!”
Mikhail Fridman
One of Russia’s richest males, Mikhail Fridman is chairman of conglomerate Alfa Group—considered one of Russia’s largest non-public lenders. The 58-year-old was not too long ago slapped with sanctions from the European Union, which described him as a “top Russian financier and enabler of Putin’s inner circle.”

Fridman has known as the invasion of Ukraine a “tragedy,” that “should be stopped as soon as possible.” In a letter to employees shortly after Putin’s invasion started, he mentioned that he needed the “bloodshed to end.”
“My parents are Ukrainian citizens and live in Lviv, my favorite city. But I have also spent much of my life as a citizen of Russia, building and growing businesses. I am deeply attached to Ukrainian and Russian peoples and see the current conflict as a tragedy for them both,” wrote Fridman.
Vladimir Lisin
The Russian oligarch is the chairman and fundamental shareholder of Novolipetsk Steel, considered one of Russia’s largest steelmakers.
In a letter to employees, Lisin mentioned the misplaced lives in Ukraine because of Putin’s conflict have been a tragedy that was exhausting to justify, and mentioned that the corporate and its board of administrators hoped the battle would quickly come to an finish.
“I would like to begin by expressing my deepest compassion to all the victims of the armed conflict in Ukraine, the families and relatives of those who died,” Lisin wrote.
“Lost lives are always a huge tragedy that is impossible to justify. I am convinced that peaceful diplomatic conflict resolution is always preferable to the use of force.”
Alexei Mordashov
Steel magnate Alexei Mordashov is among the richest males in Russia. The 54-year-old is the principle shareholder and chairman of Severstal, a Russian conglomerate.
Days after the conflict started, he known as on Putin to cease the “bloodshed” and described the battle as a “tragedy of two fraternal peoples.”

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“It is terrible that Ukrainians and Russians are dying, people are suffering hardships and the economy is collapsing,” he instructed the information outlet RBK. “We must do everything necessary so that a way out of this conflict is found in the very near future and the bloodshed stops.”
“I have absolutely nothing to do with the emergence of the current geopolitical tension. I don’t understand why sanctions have been imposed against us,” he added.