Russiaâs plundering of Ukrainian territory, by whatever name, has no legal standing and any such sales are legally void
The Russian-installed occupation âauthoritiesâ have begun auctioning plundered Ukrainian residential and commercial buildings, while calling this ânationalizationâ. In a particularly cynical touch, Russiaâs so-called Crimean leader, Sergei Aksyonov earlier claimed that the money raised from such entirely illegal âsalesâ will go to fund Russiaâs war of aggression against Ukraine.
Vladimir Konstantinov, speaker of the occupation âparliamentâ, reported on 16 September that eight so-called âauctionsâ had already been held in occupied Crimea, with the property âsoldâ worth over 815 million roubles (almost 8 million euros). Typically, Konstantinov tried to pass this off as the sale of ânationalized property of Ukrainian oligarchsâ, including a villa belonging to President Volodymyr Zelensky and his wife. In fact, Russiaâs illegal expropriation of Ukrainian property in Crimea includes that belonging to ordinary individuals and legal entities. On 24 May this year, Refat Chubarov, head of the Mejlis, or representative assembly, of the Crimean Tatar people reported that the Russian occupation regime had âissued a decision to nationalizeâ the building in Simferopol which, until September 2014, served as the headquarters of the Mejlis in Crimea, as well as housing the editorial office of the Mejlisâ official newspaper, Avdet.  The Mejlis were forcibly evicted in September 2014 as part of the vengeance measures against individual Mejlis leaders and the Mejlis itself for their unwavering opposition to Russiaâs occupation of Ukrainian Crimea. Since 2017, Russia has been flouting a binding order from the UNâs International Court of Justice to withdraw its ban on the Mejlis. Russiaâs illegal ban is, however, no excuse for this brazen expropriation as the building itself belongs to the Crimea Foundation, a charitable organization.
Konstantinov first announced the occupation regimeâs supposed ânationalizationâ of around 700 properties in early February this year, claiming these to be the property âof oligarchs, politicians and businessmenâ.  It was then that Aksyonov asserted that the proceeds made from the resulting auctions would be used towards Russiaâs war against Ukraine (which he, following the Kremlin, called âthe special military operationâ).
Russia began its so-called ânationalizationâ of Ukrainian state property immediately after its invasion of Crimea.  This has included cases of outright plunder, such as the âsaleâ of the world-renowned Massandra Winery to a subsidiary of the Rossiya Bank owned by Yury Kovalchuk, a crony of Russian president Vladimir Putin.
On 24 March 2020, Putin issued an illegal decree extending Russiaâs list of âcoastal territoriesâ on which âforeign nationals, stateless persons and foreign legal entitiesâ cannot own land to cover around 80% of occupied Crimea, except for three regions without access to the Black Sea. Stripped of such cynical verbiage, this simply meant that the Ukrainian owners of property on a peninsula which remains internationally recognized as Ukrainian territory were being called âforeign nationalsâ in order to deny them their right to own their own property.  This is in violation of Article 53 of the Geneva Convention on the Protection of Civilians which expressly prohibits the destruction or expropriation of property by occupying powers. The owners were given a year in which to either take Russian citizenship or try to sell the property, in order to avoid it being forcibly sold at a huge loss.
By April 2023, almost six thousand owners of land had been thus stripped of their rights. The number by now is likely to be higher.
Kyiv has already stated clearly that such transactions have no legal validity and no legal consequences. Those Russians believing that they have âboughtâ such plundered property should, therefore, beware.