Vladimir Potanin told a court in Moscow that he has no assets, despite being listed by Forbes as Russia's richest man worth £10billion.His scorned ex-wife Natalia, 53, to whom he was married for 30 years, blasted her former husband's court claim that he is merely a millionaire. He 'offered' her £32million settlement - but she says he's worth £10billion and wants half.
'He left that evening, leaving those papers, and he has not slept at home since then. He never came back. So the last memory of my husband was how he started the conversation, and how it got nowhere.Natalia made clear she will appeal the Russian verdict given last month which she described as 'odious', and which has been seen as a major setback in her quest to become the world's wealthiest ex-wife.
I find it extremely unpleasant to sit in court and hear about all the extramarital affairs which, it turned out, my husband had when we were together.'It's exhausting, and if there is a way to avoid it, quickly and peacefully, I would certainly go for it.'But what my husband offered was for me to sign papers saying that I had no claims on assets, and that was it.'It happened in November 2013, which is when he suggested we divorce. This was the moment when we spoke for the last time.'
Both Pictured in 1977 |
'I think he is totally irrational, aggressive and not reasonable. I struggle to explain it.'His social position, his public face has always been based on an image of a strong family man.'I trusted my husband completely. I believed him, I, well, I loved him. I realise this was wrong, in that to be blind in your belief in someone is wrong. But I was absolutely happy in the past.'I can't understand what will come next. I am not broken, but I continue living in this situation and, whatever I do, it still dominates my life. I don't have freedom.'She shows a steely confidence that she will win in the end
'I want to show other women in a similar situation that we have got to keep fighting and not to give up, at least for the sake of our children,' she said. 'Yes, Vladimir Potanin and his lawyers keep winning court cases, but I don't see it as their final victory.'There are thousands of women in Russia in a similar situation, ruthlessly dumped, often with newborn children.'Men allow themselves to treat women like something they possess and can throw away at the point when they get bored and want something new.
'This has to stop. There are laws that protect women in Russia, but they don't always work in reality.'
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