Azerbaijani first family’s Russian dacha

Leyla Aliyeva’s property located in Moscow’s upscale area along the Rublyevo-Uspenskoye Highway is probably worth tens of millions of given that the median value of current houses for sale in the settlement is US$ 37 million.


BY OLESYA SHMAGUN OCCRP

Seven kilometers west of Moscow along the Rublyevo-Uspenskoye Highway, a three-meter-high green metal fence cuts through the cool pine forest. Behind the fence lies Mayendorf Gardens, a subdivision in the exclusive and secretive Rublevka community that is home to Forbes millionaires, State Duma deputies, and high-ranking public officials.

One of the homeowners is Leyla Aliyeva, the elder daughter of Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev, who is listed in various records as either 30 or 31 years old. Experts told the Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project (OCCRP) her property is probably worth tens of millions of given that the median value of current houses for sale in the settlement is US$ 37 million.

OCCRP has been tracking the first family’s wealth and the Dacha is just one of the many luxury mansions the Aliyevs own around the world despite Ilham Aliyev having only served as a public servant during most of his life.


Impolite people

Rublyevo-Uspenskoye Highway is the impeccably maintained road that President Vladimir Putin takes every day as he is whisked from his residence to his Kremlin office.

When Putin is on the road, other drivers must cool their heels, while his car zips past surrounded by black security cars with flashers.

Those who aren’t the president can expect to endure heavy traffic, generally featuring a black Mercedes or white Lexus roaring up from behind and honking to get by. When they do overtake, the impatient drivers may bestow some choice words on slower vehicles.

On a trip to Mayendorf Gardens, a reporter for OCCRP was called a number of things by the speeding drivers, the most printable being “silly fool!” and “filth!”


You’re not welcome here

Mayendorf Gardens was built on the grounds of the former Soviet health resort Barvikha that was in the state’s hands until 2001.



According to real estate agents



, the landscape of the gated community features lakes and hills that evoke Alpine views.

It is just a few minutes’ walk from the Chateau Mayendorf – a restored family estate which Putin likes to use for formal occasions. It’s handy for him — his official residence, Novo-Ogaryovo, is just a few minutes’ drive from Mayendorf Chateau, a turn-of-the-century castle from which the area gets its name.

According to



documents



obtained by OCCRP, Leyla Aliyeva



obtained a property



 in the posh gated community in May 2006 – right after she married Emin Agalarov, a Russian pop singer and entrepreneur of Azerbaijani origin who is also the son of a major Moscow developer.



The couple announced



 they are divorcing in May of this year.

While the Barvikha area was popular among the Soviet elite as far back as the Stalin years, the early years of this century saw an explosion of a new kind of exclusive enclave along Rublyevo-Uspenskoye Highway, an area referred to as Rublevka.

The are plenty of them: Zhukovka, Barvikha, Gorky… One of the Barvikha houses, in fact, this year made a list of the



15 most expensive rental properties in the world



. Rublevka became for Russian citizens a symbol of wealth and elitism, but elitism of a special kind. People believe such extremely expensive properties are out of reach for people earning an honest living. And the building of three-meter fences seems to support that perception.


Nothing succeeds like excess

At first, average people tried to peer under the fences, and books and movies about life in Rublevka were popular. But over time the public has become inured to such luxury, and few now seem surprised that such homes cost tens of millions of dollars.

Rublevka may even have lost a bit of its luster, as wealthy people now have properties on the Cote d’Azur or in Miami. “А lot of houses stay empty for years: some owners got divorced, some moved abroad. Rublevka hasn’t been selling well lately. But the prices have not come down so far,” says real estate consultant Natalya Orekhova.

The land Aliyeva bought covers 7,660 square meters (about 2 acres) and is surrounded by pine trees, with a small lake nearby. Without an invitation, it’s nearly impossible to take a look at Aliyeva’s house, since privacy is so highly valued by the community’s residents.

The privacy perimeter begins far from the elaborate houses. From the checkpoint at the security gatehouse, it is only possible to glimpse a neat asphalt road leading deep into the forest. Trespassers can’t get more than a couple of steps beyond the barrier before being intercepted by security guards.

According to one of the guards, even taking photos is prohibited.

“Even if you are an invited guest, neighbors will rat you out by informing the security that you have taken pictures. Then we will take a look at your telephone to make sure no photos of the community remain,”

 says the security guard.

Some details can be gleaned from the documents. Aliyeva’s property includes two buildings – a large residential house of 577 square meters and a slightly larger outbuilding of 581 square meters. It is difficult to accurately estimate the value of the property, as most of the sites were purchased in the early years of this century.

However, one of Aliyeva’s neighbors,



Ruslan Baysarov



 (ranked 103 in the list of wealthy Russians compiled by the



Russian edition of Forbes Magazine



) about two years ago



mortgaged his property



in the gated community for almost US$ 40 million. Real estate ads found on realtors’ websites list similar purchase prices for the area ranging from US$19 million to upwards of US$73 million.


Powerful neighbors

Besides Baysarov (a close friend of Chechen President Ramzan Kadyrov), Aliyeva’s neighbors include



Alexey Bogdanchikov



, the son of the former president of Rosneft, the biggest Russian oil company;



Vladimir Lisin



, a metals tycoon who is ranked 8th in the Forbes list; banker



Olga Belyavtseva



, (ranked 2nd in the Forbes’ Women’s List), and several State Duma Deputies.

In 2014 a number of



media outlets reported



that ousted former Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych bought a property in Mayendorf Gardens. OCCRP has obtained documents on all the land plots in the gated community, but neither Yanukovych’s name, nor the names of any of his known associates, are listed as owners.

However, it should be noted that some owners try hard to obscure their names. Several pieces of property here are registered by offshore companies from several jurisdictions which lead to British Virgin Islands or Panama.



This article originally appeared on OCCRP’s Free Khadija

website


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