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Russia seeks Opel compensation from GM

Russia's biggest bank Sberbank said Friday it has made a proposal to General Motors seeking compensation for losses it incurred after the US auto giant dropped plans to sell its Opel unit.

Russia seeks Opel compensation from GM
Photo: DPA

German Gref, Sberbank chief executive and a former Russian trade minister, said the bank would go to court unless GM agrees to cover the expenses incurred by the Russian state-owned bank in talks to buy GM’s European unit Opel.

“We have formulated all the expenses now and forwarded to the company a proposal on voluntary compensation of the costs,” Ria-Novosti news agency quoted Gref as saying.

“If it is not accepted, then we will seek the compensation through legal proceedings. We have sustained serious losses,” Gref added without elaborating.

Sberbank chief executive said last month his bank was weighing legal action against GM. Russia felt cheated after GM in November scrapped plans to sell a 55-percent stake in Opel to Canadian auto parts maker Magna and Sberbank, despite a preliminary deal reached after months of talks.

“Nine months of talks, 9,000 initialed pages of the contract had been ready for signing,” Gref said according to Interfax. “And two days before the deal GM abandoned it.”

Russian officials had hoped the deal would be a chance to boost the country’s ailing car industry and obtain top European automotive technologies and expertise.

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RUSSIA

Russia announces no New Year’s greetings for France, US, Germany

US President Joe Biden, France's Emmanuel Macron and German Chancellor Olaf Scholz will not be receiving New Year's greetings from Russian leader Vladimir Putin, the Kremlin said on Friday.

Russia announces no New Year's greetings for France, US, Germany

As the world gears up to ring in the New Year this weekend, Putin sent congratulatory messages to the leaders of Kremlin-friendly countries including Turkey, Syria, Venezuela and China.

But Putin will not wish a happy New Year to the leaders of the United States, France and Germany, countries that have piled unprecedented sanctions on Moscow over Putin’s assault on Ukraine.

“We currently have no contact with them,” Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters.

“And the president will not congratulate them given the unfriendly actions that they are taking on a continuous basis,” he added.

Putin shocked the world by sending troops to pro-Western Ukraine on February 24.

While Kyiv’s Western allies refused to send troops to Ukraine, they have been supplying the ex-Soviet country with weapons in a show of support that has seen Moscow suffer humiliating setbacks on the battlefield.

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