Did Moscow Mayor Yury Luzhkov help his wife raise a billion dollar fortune? What will happen to the Inteko company owned by Baturina after the scandalous resignation of Luzhkov? Who was Elena Baturina's grandfather and why was her uncle imprisoned? How did the future billionaire meet Yuri Luzhkov and what did they do together in the basements of the White House? This and much more is in the book by Mikhail Kozyrev, the same journalist whose scandalous article became the beginning of the “war” between Baturina and Forbs magazine. Trade in computers and used military equipment. The release of "consumer goods" and the invention of a disposable plastic stack for vodka. Development of the Khodynka field and the lands of the Moscow State University. Gambling on shares and furious "showdowns" within the Baturin family. Year after year, the author analyzes the events and phenomena that made Elena Baturina the richest woman entrepreneur in Russia. For a wide range of readers.

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The following excerpt from the book Elena Baturina: how the wife of the former mayor of Moscow earned billions (Mikhail Kozyrev, 2010) provided by our book partner - the company LitRes.

Youth Baturina. Acquaintance with Luzhkov

Who is Elena Baturina? Where did you come from and in what environment did you grow up?

In her interviews, Baturina does not like to be frank on these topics (as well as, in general, she does not like to be frank). But Elena Baturina has an older brother, Victor. Four years ago, in 2006, his sister threw him out of the business. Freed from the "turnover", Viktor Baturin wrote a book. Or rather, co-authored. The co-authors were the leader of the Liberal Democratic Party Vladimir Zhirinovsky and his fellow party member Sergei Abeltsev. A piece called "Chantera pas!" describes the world history and the history of Russia, reducing it to the interaction of two social groups - efficient and hard-working people, on the one hand, and their antipodes, the so-called "shantraps", on the other.


I will not undertake to comment on the content of this "work", I will only say that it is, to put it mildly, debatable. But I was interested in numerous "lyrical digressions" about the past and present of the Baturin family, with which Viktor Baturin equipped his historiosophical narrative. The book came to me in a version of one of the preprinted versions. I contacted Viktor Baturin and asked if the information contained in the book could be used. He grumbled something like "you can use it, there are no secrets." I don’t know about “secrets”, but something about the Baturin family from the book becomes clear.

So, let's start from the very beginning. If you believe Viktor Baturin, then his (and Elena Baturina's) paternal grandfather was born in the village of Katino, Ryazan province, into a peasant family. Yegor Baturin and his wife Elena had nine children. The eldest son, born in 1915, became one of the first Komsomol members, and then communists in the village. Participated in dispossession, organized a local collective farm, fought against religion. Once, according to family tradition, Baturin the activist even burst into his parents' hut and began to cut icons. The mother responded by throwing a pot of hot cabbage soup at her son. He, badly scalded, turned around and left the hut, furiously slamming the door. As was often the case with "activists", in 1939 Yelena Baturina's uncle was arrested. He was tried, recognized as an "enemy of the people" and sent for 15 years to camps in the north of the Komi Republic.


Nikolai, the youngest of the brothers and the future father of Elena Baturina, was then 12 years old. In the village, they began to look askance at the family of the “enemy of the people”. The Baturins, fearing further persecution, moved to Moscow. There, Elena Baturina's grandfather got a job working for the railroad.


In 1944, Baturina's father was drafted into the army. But the war was already coming to an end, he did not get to the front, but was seconded to restore the coal enterprises of the Tula region. From the "military miners" Nikolai Baturin was demobilized in 1951. He got a job at the Moscow Fraser plant. He got married, graduated from the machine-tool technical school, became a foreman at the pipe equipment section. Things were going well. In 1963, the Baturins, who had previously huddled in a communal room, were given a whole two-room apartment on Sormovskaya Street. Elena Baturina grew up in it.


In total, Nikolai Baturin and his wife had three children - two sons and a daughter. However, the eldest son, Gennady, died in early age from pneumonia. Elena, youngest child, grew up with the middle son Victor. Victor was six years older. There was no wealth in the family. For example, when Vitya went to first grade, his mother could not get a white festive shirt. I had to sew it myself - from my daughter's diapers.

In her interviews, Elena Baturina recalls every time that the family lived in poverty. She herself, as the youngest, had to sleep in the same room with her parents.


By the time the children grew up, Nikolai Baturin became seriously ill - something related to the spine. Victor studied at school for eight years, after which, at the insistence of his father, he entered a technical school. He wanted his son to get a profession before going to serve in the army. The family should not have been left without a breadwinner.

About Elena Baturina, from her own words, it is known that at school she was often sick. Doctors said she had weak lungs, so she never smoked. At school, she, unlike her brother, completed her studies until the 10th grade. Baturina did not shine with success. After school, she went to work at a factory where her mother and father worked. However, Elena was not going to stay on the Fraser at all.

“When I graduated from the 10th grade, I just couldn’t find a place for myself - all the time I thought about where to go. After all, as soon as I make a little mistake, I can’t fix anything, I can’t catch up with those who go ahead by five or six years, and I will trail behind, ”she later said.


Summary? Unlike, say, billionaire Mikhail Prokhorov, Elena Baturina does not come from a family that was part of the Soviet elite. But she was not a rootless orphan, like Roman Abramovich, either. Baturina grew up in a normal working family. Both father and mother Baturina did not have a higher education. The morals in the family were simple, I would even say severe. This is felt in an interview with Viktor and Elena Baturin. I mean their real, not "written" interviews.

“I am not an intelligent person, I am a simple guy from a working factory family,” Viktor Baturin once said. “My father said: tell a man for three years that he is a pig, he will grunt,” this is Elena Baturina in an interview in October 2010. magazine The New Times.

But here, in my opinion, is the best quote from the Baturins on this score. It belongs to Victor: “Kisses and hugs are not accepted in our family. For example, I don’t call my mother just like that. If she needs it, she will call herself, sit and wait. My sister and I were not accustomed to show kindred feelings, especially in public.”


In general, the parents could not prepare (motivate) their daughter to enter a prestigious university right after school - the most common beginning of a good career in the days of the late USSR. But stubbornness, perseverance, it seems, they managed to instill.

The girl, who grew up in the proletarian district of Vykhino, has developed the ability to go towards her goal. It was this, and, it seems, the business acumen and peasant cunning inherited from the previous generation that made Baturina not just the mayor's wife, but also the richest woman in Russia.

““ Batura ” in translation from Old Slavonic means stubborn. So I’m quite a stubborn person, ”Baturina said about herself in one of the interviews.

After school, Baturina's stubbornness was very necessary. She managed to get through only to the evening department of the Institute of Management named after Sergo Ordzhonikidze. Baturina did not manage to enter the day. And in order to be able to study in the evening, she, according to Soviet standards, needed to work. And she went to the same Fraser plant where her father and mother worked. This went on for a year and a half. Then Baturina left the factory.


Your act in different time she explained differently. “Soon I quit the factory because I couldn’t bear to get up early. I am an owl by nature, and waking up early is a tragedy for me, ”said Baturina in her 2005 interview.

Three years before 2002, Elena Baturina described the same circumstances in a different way: “It was terribly difficult for me to leave the factory. I was called to the director, and he gave a lecture on how immoral it is to interrupt the dynasty, since everyone worked for me at this plant: uncles, aunts, brothers, sisters. But I had nowhere to go - since I studied at an economic university, I have to work in my specialty. And I went to the Institute of Economic Problems of the Integrated Development of the National Economy of the City of Moscow. I left with a terrible decline. For a salary of 190 rubles.


But be that as it may, the transition to work at the institute played key role V future fate Elena Baturina. And the point is not only that Baturina managed to get a job in a completely “warm place”. The institution where she now worked was the lead one in developing programs for the development of the urban economy: where and what kind of production to locate, how to provide them with labor resources, etc. that she was paid 145 rubles at the factory immediately after school) more than compensated for the prospects for the future.

Reasoning in an everyday way: what kind of husband could she find for herself on the factory floor? Another thing is one of the leading research institutions in the capital's urban economy. The chance didn't take long to present itself. And Baturina did not miss him.


In 1987, the perestroika initiated by Mikhail Gorbachev reached the institute where Baturina worked. In the spring of that year, the USSR Council of Ministers adopted several resolutions that allowed private entrepreneurship in the country. At the same time, by decision of the Moscow City Executive Committee, a special body was created with the long name "Commission for Individual Labor and Cooperative Activities."

Yuri Luzhkov, at that time deputy chairman of the Moscow City Executive Committee, was appointed chairman of the commission. And to ensure the current activities of the commission, a special working group was created, consisting of two employees of the institute of national economy subordinate to the Moscow authorities. One of them was Elena Baturina. In the summer of 1987, Luzhkov and Baturina met.


The future mayor of Moscow was 51 years old. Luzhkov made his career at petrochemical enterprises. Luzhkov was remembered by his former subordinate for his indefatigable energy. At one of the enterprises led by Luzhkov, the nickname "Duce" was assigned to the future mayor of the capital. And not only for resemblance. In 1986, Luzhkov worked as the head of the department for science and technology in the Ministry chemical industry THE USSR. From there, Boris Yeltsin “pulled him out”. Having just been appointed first secretary of the capital city committee of the CPSU, Yeltsin was looking for "fresh" personnel for Moscow structures. Luzhkov received the post of deputy chairman of the Moscow City Executive Committee and at the same time - chairman of the Moscow City Agro-Industrial Committee, where he oversaw the provision of food to the population of Moscow. Well, at the same time, as a social burden, Luzhkov was entrusted with a commission on cooperatives.


By the time he met Baturina, Luzhkov's first wife, Marina, was still alive, but seriously ill. She died in 1989 from liver cancer. The widower had two children - Mikhail and Alexander.

“No, it was not love at first sight, we worked together for quite a long time and did not even discuss our feelings especially. But on a subconscious level, I always knew that I would be his wife", - Elena Baturina later recalled about her "romance" with Yuri Luzhkov.

Yuri Luzhkov met the parents of his future wife about a week before the wedding. When he first came to visit the Baturins, there was an episode described later by Viktor Baturin, the elder brother of Elena Baturina.


Baturina's father, Nikolai Yegorovich, suggested that his future son-in-law play chess. Luzhkov agreed. As Viktor Baturin writes, Luzhkov started the game aggressively, it was clear that he did not consider the father of his future wife to be a serious opponent. But very soon Luzhkov found himself in a difficult position, he began to think for a long time about each move. Soon, Baturin Sr., deciding not to torment the guest, offered Luzhkov a draw, he gladly agreed.

When Elena Baturina and her fiancé left, Viktor Baturin asked his father: “Why did you offer a draw, did you have a practically winning position?” He just chuckled and didn't reply.

“Now, of course, I understand that my sister was 29 years old and my father was glad that she was starting a family,” Baturin writes.

Soon Yuri Luzhkov and Elena Baturina got married. They had two girls - Alena (1992) and Olga (1994). However, Baturina did not want to change her last name. “I was already seriously engaged in business then - my name was already known. Changing my surname would create certain technical difficulties for me, ”Baturina later recalled.

What business are you talking about? In 1991, Elena Baturina, on shares with her brother Viktor, registered the Inteko cooperative.


Working in the commission on cooperatives, Baturina herself was imbued with the spirit of entrepreneurship. "Komsomolenka" Mikhail Khodorkovsky, as Baturina herself later said, she helped organize the first student cooperatives. She was familiar with all the prominent entrepreneurs among the first legal "Soviet" businessmen - Artem Tarasov, Vladimir Gusinsky and others.

In other words, she was in the very thick of the emerging cooperative movement, had an idea of ​​all the moves and exits.

“It was stupid to sit by the water and not get drunk,” Viktor Baturin sums up, referring to the reasons for the creation of the Inteko cooperative.


What exactly the Inteko cooperative did in the first year after its creation is still not exactly known. The repeatedly stated official version, by Elena Baturina, says that software development. But what exactly did Inteko do?

Here is what Viktor Baturin writes about this in his memoirs:

“…How was the first ‘big’ money made? Of course, not on pies and restaurants! I can tell you what I know personal experience. For example, all Soviet enterprises, especially defense ones, had a so-called fund for technical re-equipment and a fund for new equipment. These funds had one feature - the money had to be spent within a year, otherwise they would disappear. If you are not a complete idiot and you have acquaintances at some enterprise, then you call your friend and ask: “How much money do you have unused for funds?” He, for example, answers: “One hundred thousand rubles.” You ask him what kind of work is planned for this amount, draw up an agreement for a cooperative, and do the work. Under the agreement, non-cash money is received from the enterprise to the cooperative. They were cooperatively cashed in a bank, and computers were bought with cash. The difference in prices (“cash” - “clearing”) was enormous!”

Even in an interview with Vedomosti, Viktor Baturin described his Crimean odyssey: “I went to the Crimea and made computer classes there on two collective farms, then computer science was in vogue. They say they still work. I remember I earned 150 or 160 thousand rubles on this. I brought them out in two suitcases. That's how it all started. There were no taxes then, except for income taxes, and there were no laws.” It was 1990 or early 1991.


But the most detailed description of the launch of the Inteko business is contained in the book by Viktor Baturin.

On the morning of August 19, 1991, when millions of Soviet citizens learned about the GKChP, Viktor Baturin met in Riga, at the gates of the headquarters of the Baltic Military District. The day before, he had arrived from Moscow and managed to pay the bills for the debited military equipment- cars, power plants, trailers, etc.; On the 19th, he had to receive invoices in order to go to the units and pick up the purchased property. Although the equipment was decommissioned, in fact it was practically new - it stood at the storage bases and was not used. The Ministry of Defense decided to sell part of it. Baturin learned about this possibility from his acquaintance at the district headquarters, the rest was a simple matter.


If the putschists had acted more confidently in Moscow, Viktor and Elena Baturin would most likely have been left without money and without equipment. And in other endeavors, they would hardly have been successful. After all, it was during the days of the coup that Yuri Luzhkov proved himself to be one of Boris Yeltsin's most devoted and, moreover, effective allies.

Contrary to the demands of the State Emergency Committee, Luzhkov refused to issue an order banning rallies and demonstrations. He began calling the heads of Moscow enterprises, demanding that they allocate equipment and building materials for the construction of barricades.

If the “putschists” had taken over, the fate of Yuri Luzhkov and his newly acquired relatives would have been unenviable.


Meanwhile, Viktor Baturin, having learned in Riga from his acquaintance about the introduction of a state of emergency, immediately got into the car and by the morning of August 20 was in Moscow. At the entrance to the capital, he met columns of armored vehicles. But after a couple of days the situation in Moscow was discharged. Deals with military property were brought to an end.

“This“ business ”brought me and my sister in 1991 several million rubles. It is from this “military” money that Inteko originates,” Viktor Baturin recalls today.


However, a more significant event for the future business of Inteko occurred on June 6, 1992. By the decree of Boris Yeltsin, Yuri Luzhkov, who in reality already completely controlled the city's authorities, was appointed mayor of Moscow. He worked in this position for 18 years, 3 months and 22 days, losing it only in September 2010. Well, Elena Baturina, in 1992, a novice cooperator who made her first start-up capital on intermediary operations, today occupies the 27th line in the list of the richest Russians and owns a fortune of $ 2.9 billion.

Head of CJSC "Inteko"

Wife of Moscow Mayor Yuri Luzhkov. A major entrepreneur, the owner of the investment and construction corporation "Inteko", which occupies a leading position in the market for the production of polymers and plastic products, monolithic housing construction, and commercial real estate. In February 2007, she transferred 99 percent of the shares of Inteko to the closed-end investment fund Continental. Deputy Head working group national project "Affordable Housing", member of the Board of Directors of the Russian Land Bank. Until 2005, she was the chairman of the Equestrian Federation of the Russian Federation. According to Forbes magazine for 2008, the richest woman in Russia, owning a personal fortune of $ 4.2 billion.

Elena Nikolaevna Baturina was born on March 8, 1963. According to other sources, in 1991 she was 25 years old, that is, she was born in 1966. After school (since 1980), Baturina worked for a year and a half at the Moscow Fraser plant, where her parents worked - she was a design engineer.

In 1982, Baturina graduated from the Moscow Institute of Management named after Sergo Ordzhonikidze (now a university). According to some reports, Baturina studied at the evening department of the institute.

1982-1989 was researcher Institute of Economic Problems of the Integrated Development of the National Economy of the City of Moscow, chief specialist of the commission of the Moscow City Executive Committee on cooperatives and individual labor activity. There is evidence that Baturina started her business with a cooperative that developed software.

In 1991, the company (cooperative) "Inteko" was registered, which began to manufacture polymer products. Baturina headed it together with her brother Viktor, and later in the press she was mentioned in the media as the president of Inteko, and her brother as the general director, as vice president, and first vice president of the company. According to other data published in 2007, Baturina became the president and main owner of Inteko in 1989.

In 1991, Baturina married the future mayor of Moscow, Yuri Luzhkov (this was his second marriage), who in the past was one of the leaders of the Research Institute of Plastics and the head of the science and technology department of the USSR Ministry of Chemical Industry.

In 1992, Luzhkov became the mayor of the capital. Subsequently, Baturina denied the connection between her marriage to Luzhkov and the beginning of her own career, although they almost coincided in time. A number of media wrote that Luzhkov never specified how Inteko received profitable municipal orders. So, it is known that in the early 1990s, the Inteko cooperative won a tender and received an order for the production of almost one hundred thousand plastic chairs for the capital's stadiums. Baturina herself, in an interview with reporters, mentioned that 80,000 plastic seats for the Luzhniki stadium were made by her company. In 1999, Baturina, in an interview with Moskovsky Komsomolets, indicated that the stadium was reconstructed at the expense of the funds that the joint-stock company received from leasing space, and at the expense of loans. “I don’t see anything reprehensible in the fact that the Luzhniki management decided to buy plastic seats from me, and not pay one and a half times more expensive to the Germans,” she said.

A few years later, Inteko's business for the manufacture of plastic products was supplemented by its own raw material production based on the Moscow Oil Refinery (MNPZ), which was under the control of the capital's government. A plant for the production of polypropylene was built on the territory of the Moscow Oil Refinery, and almost all of the polymer produced by the Moscow Oil Refinery belonged to Baturina's company. Demand for polypropylene products has always been high, and in the absence of competition from other manufacturers, Inteko, according to data published by the Kompaniya magazine, managed to occupy almost a third of the Russian market for plastic products.

On February 3, 1997, Novaya Gazeta reported that part of the funds allocated by the Moscow government for the construction of the Knyaz Rurik brewery were being transferred to AOZT Inteko. The company filed a lawsuit, believing that the article defames its business reputation. On April 4, 1997, the court ordered the newspaper to publish a retraction.

In the late 1990s, the President of Kalmykia, Kirsan Ilyumzhinov, put forward the idea of ​​building the City of Chess (City Chess) to host international chess tournaments. One of the main general contractors for the construction of the city was Inteko. As a result, the company turned out to be one of the defendants in the investigation concerning the misuse of budget funds during the construction of the City of Chess. The republic, according to media reports, owed a significant amount of money to Moscow entrepreneurs. At the end of 1998, the co-owner of Inteko, Baturin, at the suggestion of Ilyumzhinov, headed the government of Kalmykia. A few months later, under an agreement between the Ministry of State Property of Kalmykia and CJSC Inteko-Chess (a subsidiary of Inteko), the Moscow company became the owner of a 38 percent stake in Kalmneft belonging to the republic (according to some reports, this happened without the knowledge of the rest of the shareholders of the oil company) . According to one version, in this way Baturin provided guarantees for the return of funds invested in the construction of City Chess. Soon dissatisfied minority shareholders of Kalmneft applied to the arbitration court with a claim against CJSC Inteko-Chess and the Ministry of State Property of Kalmykia to declare the transaction invalid. The transfer of shares was canceled, and already in February 1999, Baturin left the post of Prime Minister of the Republic of Kalmykia. In 2004, Baturina, in an interview with Izvestia, stated that many subjects of the federation owe her "unlimited amounts of money", including Kalmykia.

In the fall of 1999, Baturina ran for deputies of the State Duma in the 14th Kalmyk single-mandate constituency. Baturina's opponent in the elections was one of the leaders of the Agrarian Party of Russia and the movement "Fatherland - All Russia" (OVR) Gennady Kulik. With a request to go to the polls from Kalmykia, the Kalmyk branch of the OVR turned to Baturina, which, according to the magazine Profile, was a complete surprise for Ilyumzhinov. The publication indicated that, according to unofficial information, after some time in Moscow, a meeting took place between Ilyumzhinov, Kulik and the head of the Russian government, Yevgeny Primakov, who was asked to convince Luzhkov to dissuade his wife from running in Kalmykia. But Primakov's intervention did not help - Luzhkov refused. Returning to Elista, Ilyumzhinov made a telephone statement for Profile: "I respect and appreciate Elena Baturina and wish her good luck in the elections. If she wins, then the economy of the republic will win first of all." At a rally in Elista, organized by activists of the OVR movement, Baturina made a speech, promising that in the event of her victory, Kalmykia would live no worse than Moscow.

Earlier, in July 1999, Luzhkov's wife was at the center of a scandal involving the illegal export of capital abroad. According to employees of the Federal Security Service of the Vladimir Region, its firms Inteko and Bistroplast (whose head, according to Kommersant, was Baturin) cooperated with structures that were engaged in money laundering. According to media reports, these structures transferred $230 million abroad. Luzhkov immediately declared that Boris Berezovsky was behind this case, as well as "the administration of the President of the Russian Federation and general system, which is united by a political goal - to retain power as long as possible. "Baturina herself sent an official protest to the FSB and the Prosecutor General's Office. In the fall of 1999, she met with the director of the FSB, Nikolai Patrushev, who promised to apologize to her if the illegality of the seizure of documents by the employees of the Vladimir UFSB in firm "Inteko". In addition, an audit conducted by the reputable firm "Ernst & Young" confirmed: "Inteko" did not transfer funds to Vladimir banks suspected by security officers in financial fraud. Baturina herself said on this occasion: "The case is developing in this way what is the FSB gotta think about own security and how to get out of the current situation. And I have nothing to be afraid of.” The wife of the capital's mayor denied that one of the motives for her participation in the parliamentary elections could be a desire to protect herself from persecution by the FSB.

However, Baturina lost the election. A week before voting day, on December 12, 1999, ORT TV presenter Sergei Dorenko told viewers that Baturina owned an apartment in New York. In response, she sued the journalist, demanding a refutation and the recovery of $400,000 from Dorenko and $100,000 from the ORT TV channel. The trial, which lasted nine months, was adversarial, and in October 2000 the Ostankino District Court granted Baturina's claim. He ordered ORT to refute, and certainly on Sunday in the Vremya program, the report that she has an apartment in New York. The court estimated the moral damage and moral suffering of the plaintiff at 10,000 rubles.

According to Oleg Soloshchansky, vice-president of Inteko, the company entered the construction business back in the mid-1990s, creating the Intekostroy firm and taking part in a development project in Kalmykia. However, the actual transformation of Inteko into a large investment and construction corporation began only in 2001, when the company bought a controlling stake in the leading house-building enterprise in Moscow, OAO Domostroitelny Kombinat No. 3 (the main manufacturer of panel houses of the P-3M series). Thus, Inteko managed to take control of about a quarter of the capital's panel housing market. A year later, a division of monolithic construction appeared as part of Inteko. At the same time, the company began implementing large-scale projects: residential complexes"Grand Park", "Shuvalovsky", "Kutuzovsky" and "Krasnogorie". In mid-2002, the company acquired cement plants OJSC "Podgorensky cementnik" and OJSC "Oskolcement", and later - CJSC "Belgorodsky cement", "Kramatorsk cement plant", "Ulyanovskcement" and the leader of the North-West region "Pikalevsky cement". Thanks to this, Inteko has become the largest cement supplier in the country.

In 2003, it became known about the project of a bonded loan of Inteko CJSC. At the same time, for the first time, it became clear that Baturina owns 99 percent of the company's shares, and 1 percent of the shares belong to her brother (earlier, in 1999, Baturina reported that her older brother owns half of the company's shares). Inteko estimated its share in the capital's panel housing market at 20 percent, while, according to media reports, the company built up to a third of standard houses under municipal housing construction programs for city orders. Some time later, "Inteko" announced the creation of its own real estate structure "Magistrat" ​​and launched its first advertising campaign. In February 2004, Baturina's company placed its debut bond issue for 1.2 billion rubles. The media indicated that investors were skeptical about Inteko's desire to borrow funds at a rate of no more than 13% per annum, so less than a quarter of the issue was sold at the auction. The rest, according to the experts of NIKoil, which carried out the placement, was sold by the underwriter in the negotiation deals mode. In turn, independent analysts suggested that the rest of the Inteko loan (more than 900 million rubles at face value) was bought up by NIKoil itself.

On July 8, 2003, the Vedomosti newspaper published an article "The Elena Baturina Complex", which, in particular, stated that the Moscow bureaucracy "makes a pleasant exception" for the mayor's wife's business. Baturina, believing that she was accused of using marital status to take advantage of entrepreneurial activity, filed a lawsuit, and on January 21, 2004, the Golovinsky District Court ordered the publication to publish a refutation.

In 2003, Inteko-agro, a subsidiary of Inteko, bought more than a dozen farms in the Belgorod region that were on the verge of bankruptcy. In an interview with Izvestiya, Baturina said about her Belgorod business: “In Belgorod we are building a large plastics processing plant - and the local governor ordered us to take on the livestock complex and bring it out of unprofitability. We have to buy bull-calves and grow them for sale. " The governor of the Belgorod region, Yevgeny Savchenko, initially supported Baturina. However, in 2005, the regional authorities accused the agricultural holding of buying up land under "gray" schemes and underpriced prices with the aim of their further speculative resale. Later it turned out that the activities of Inteko-agro interfered with the development of the Yakovlevsky mine, which belonged to Metal Group LLC, a company controlled by the Russian ambassador to Ukraine Viktor Chernomyrdin and his son Vitaly (Baturina refused to transfer land to the regional authorities for the construction of a railway to the mine). On October 9, an attack was made on the executive director of Inteko-Agro LLC Alexander Annenkov in Belgorod, and the next day Inteko lawyer Dmitry Shteinberg was killed in Moscow. Baturina appealed to President Vladimir Putin with a request to dismiss the governor of the Belgorod region. After that, Savchenko, speaking on regional television, said that some "uninvited guests would like to change the government in the region," and "their black PR specialists stop at nothing, even blood." Deputy of the State Duma Alexander Khinshtein and deputy of Rosprirodnadzor Oleg Mitvol spoke openly in defense of the interests of Inteko-agro. However, on federal level no one began to publicly intercede for the Baturins. In the same month, elections to the regional duma were held in Belgorod: " United Russia"headed by Governor Savchenko. The Liberal Democratic Party, supported by Inteko, did not get even seven percent of the vote.

In 2004, the press named Inteko's participation in the construction of residential microdistricts on the Khodynka field, in the area of ​​Moscow State University and Tekstilshchiki among the largest projects of Inteko. The total cost of construction projects was estimated at $550 million. At the same time, the media noted that the cost of housing in the capital since the purchase of the construction company DSK-3 by Baturina has increased by 2.4 times. In the same year, the Internet publication Izvestia.ru published information that Baturina allegedly acquired 110 hectares of land along Novorizhskoye Highway outside the Moscow Ring Road for the construction of an elite microdistrict, for the sake of rising prices for apartments in which the Moscow authorities forced the construction of Krasnopresnensky Prospekt - he must was to connect the highway with the city center, which would make it possible to overcome the path from Krasnogorsk to the Kremlin in half an hour - without traffic jams and traffic lights.

On February 15, 2004, as a result of a partial collapse of the roof of the building of the Transvaal Park water park in the Moscow district of Yasenevo, 28 visitors to the entertainment complex were killed and more than 100 were injured. park" was financed by relatives of the Moscow mayor" said that by the time of the disaster, the water park business was completely controlled by Terra-Oil, and the deal to purchase shares from the previous owners of Transvaal-Park, the European Technologies and Service company, was financed by two presidents of CJSC "Inteko" - Baturina and her brother. The publication concluded that de jure Inteko was not among the founders of the companies managing Transvaal Park, but its shareholders in February 2004 were the largest creditors of Terra-Oil. In March 2005, the Tverskoy District Court of Moscow partially satisfied Baturina's claim for the protection of honor and dignity against the Kommersant publishing house and its journalists Rinat Gizatulin and Andrey Mukhin. The court recognized the information published in the newspaper as untrue and discrediting the honor and dignity of Baturina. At the same time, the court exacted 10,000 rubles from each defendant in favor of Baturina as compensation for non-pecuniary damage. In addition, the Tverskoy Court of Moscow satisfied another lawsuit filed by Baturina against the Kommersant newspaper in connection with the publication of the article "The Mayor with Complexes" (January 29, 2004). This article reported that Baturina decided "the fate of Moscow Vice Mayor Valery Shantsev" (after the election of the capital's mayor, Luzhkov reorganized the mayor's office, pushing Shantsev, who previously oversaw the capital's economy, to a less significant post). This information was also recognized by the court as untrue and subject to refutation.

On January 29, 2005, journalist Yulia Latynina on the air of Ekho Moskvy radio stated that Baturina is a co-owner of the Transvaal Park that collapsed on February 14, 2004, and the Inteko company received $ 200 million for the construction of the Moscow State University library, declared as a gift. On February 28, 2005, Baturina sent a request to the editor-in-chief of the radio station Alexei Venediktov to refute this information, which was subsequently done.

In 2005, Inteko sold all its cement plants to Filaret Galchev's Eurocement for $800 million, and some time later Baturina sold DSK-3 to the PIK Group. After the sale of the plant, Inteko left the panel housing market. According to a number of media reports, Inteko claimed that the sale of DSK-3 and cement plants was part of a strategy for consolidating resources for the development of monolithic housing construction and the creation of a pool of commercial real estate. Within 5–6 years, the company promised to build more than 1 million square meters office space and create a large national hotel chain covering the territory from Central Europe to the Asia-Pacific region. However, market participants expressed doubts about Inteko's intentions to become one of the largest players in the commercial real estate market in Moscow and the regions.

In the spring of 2006, Inteko returned to the cement market by purchasing the Verkhnebakansky cement plant in the Krasnodar Territory from the SU-155 group. In December 2006, Inteko vice-president Vladimir Guz told Vedomosti that Inteko had acquired another cement plant in the Krasnodar Territory, Atakaycement, located near Novorossiysk. The purchase of a small enterprise with a capacity of 600,000 tons per year was estimated by experts at $40-90 million. Guz did not name the sellers of the enterprise and the amount of the transaction, but the publication, referring to market participants and a source in the administration Krasnodar Territory, main former owner"Atakaycement" called the president of the Samara "Wings of the Soviets" Alexander Baranovsky. "Inteko plans to create on the basis of two plants the largest cement production association in Russia with a total capacity of over 5 million tons of cement per year," Guz said. In addition, Inteko, he said, plans to build several more factories in Russia. Vedomosti drew readers' attention to the fact that Baturina is the deputy head of the working group of the national project "Affordable Housing". She, according to the newspaper, has repeatedly noted that the shortage and high prices for cement hold back the implementation of the project. UBS analyst Alexei Morozov remarked: " good time for investments in cement... Those who start construction first will gain market share and shorten the payback period of their investments.”

In July 2006, Baturina was elected to the Board of Directors of JSCB Russian Land Bank.

On December 1, 2006, information was published that the Axel Springer Russia Publishing House refused to print an article about Baturina and her business, destroying the entire circulation of the December issue of the Russian Forbes magazine. The leadership of the publishing house explained this step by the fact that the publication "did not follow the principles of journalistic ethics." One of the employees of the publishing house told Vedomosti that on the eve of the magazine's release, Ilya Parnyshkov, Inteko's vice president for foreign economic relations, came to the editorial office of Forbes with a copy of the statement of claim. The newspaper pointed out that representatives of Inteko threatened the publisher with claims for the protection of business reputation. In turn, the American Forbes demanded that Axel Springer release the current issue in the form in which it was printed. As a result, the December issue of the Russian Forbes came out in its original form, and cost 20 percent more than before the scandal.

In early February 2007, Vedomosti, referring to the lawyer of the editor-in-chief Maxim Kashulinsky and the editorial staff of the Russian Forbes, Alexander Dobrovinsky, reported on the lawsuits of the Inteko company against the magazine and its editor-in-chief. Lawsuits were filed in different courts: against Kashulinsky "On the dissemination of untrue information discrediting business reputation" - in the Chertanovsky court of Moscow, and "On the refutation of false information discrediting business reputation and the recovery of non-material losses caused as a result of the dissemination of data information" to the editors of the Russian version of Forbes magazine - to the Moscow Arbitration. Gennady Terebkov, press secretary of Inteko, told Vedomosti that the amount of each of the claims was 106,500 rubles (1 ruble for each copy of the December issue of Forbes magazine).

On March 21, 2007, the Chertanovsky Court of Moscow satisfied the claim of Inteko against Kashulinsky, recovering 109 thousand 165 rubles from the editor-in-chief of the Russian version of Forbes magazine, and not 106 thousand 500 rubles, since the legal costs of Baturina's company were estimated at 2 thousand 665 rubles. Kashulinsky's lawyer said he intends to appeal this decision in court. On May 15, 2007, the Moscow City Court refused to consider Kashulinsky's request to declare the decision of the Chertanovsky court illegal.

The lawsuit with the publishing house turned out to be protracted. On May 21, 2007, at the request of the defendant to conduct a linguistic examination of the published materials, the Moscow Arbitration Court suspended the proceedings on the suit of CJSC Inteko. In September 2007, he nevertheless recognized the fairness of the company's claims against the publishing house, but already in November 2007, the Ninth Arbitration Court of Appeal overturned this decision.

Then, in December 2007, representatives of Inteko decided to change the subject of the claim, claiming damage to Inteko's business reputation. The company demanded that not only Axel Springer Russia, but also the authors of the material, Mikhail Kozyrev and Maria Abakumova, be held jointly and severally liable, and that the same 106,500 rubles be collected from journalists and the publishing house. In January 2008, the claim under the rules of first instance was considered by the same Ninth Court of Appeal. He decided to satisfy the claim of Baturina, obliging the journal to publish a refutation of the article that caused judicial trial, and for damaging the business reputation of "Inteko" to recover from the defendants 106 thousand 500 rubles (35 thousand 500 thousand rubles from each). Commenting on the decision of the court, lawyer Dobrovinsky announced his intention to appeal this decision to the court of cassation,. However, already in April 2008, the publishing house submitted a written petition to the Federal Arbitration Court of the Moscow District to dismiss the cassation appeal against the decision of the appellate arbitration court on the suit of CJSC Inteko.

In 2006, Viktor Baturin sold his share in the company to his sister and finally left the business, receiving a "compensation" in the form of 50 percent of the shares of Inteko-agro, as well as the entire Sochi business of the company. According to other sources, at the beginning of January 2006, Baturin retained his 1 percent stake in Inteko. In January 2006, Inteko's press service, citing Baturina, announced that her brother "is no longer the vice president of the company and is not authorized to make any statements." According to a number of media outlets, his dismissal was a consequence of the events in the Belgorod region. According to experts, the owners of Inteko did not agree on the further development of the business. Baturin himself claimed in January that he left Inteko voluntarily. In March 2006, Inteko Corporation officially announced that back in February, Baturina's brother had left the company. On March 17, the shareholders of Inteko (that is, Baturina herself) at an extraordinary meeting decided to buy back from Viktor Baturin his block of shares.

However, on January 18, 2007, there were reports in the media that back in December 2006, Baturina's brother Viktor filed a lawsuit against Inteko CJSC in the Tverskoy District Court of Moscow. According to him, he was fired from the company illegally. Baturin demanded to reinstate him at work and pay him 6 billion rubles as compensation for unused vacation for 15 years of work for the company. The observers speculated that we are talking about a "fictitious lawsuit", but in fact Viktor Baturin claims a quarter of the shares of Inteko, which, according to him, he was illegally deprived of. According to some reports, the value of this package at that time could be up to one billion dollars. On February 12, 2007, the Tverskoy Court of Moscow rejected Baturin's claim to reinstate him at Inteko. He also refused to pay the compensation demanded by Baturin.

On February 14, 2007, Elena Baturina, in turn, filed four lawsuits against her brother and his companies. The first lawsuit challenged Viktor Baturin's right to own management company"Ivan Kalita", in whose jurisdiction he once promised to transfer all his assets. The head of Inteko demanded that the company be returned to itself. Three more lawsuits motivated by "failure to fulfill obligations under contracts" contained property claims against Baturin's companies - Inteko-Agro-Service (for 48 million rubles) and Inteko-Agro (for 265 million rubles). Baturin did not comment on the first lawsuit, and called the amounts of claims against his companies "insignificant" and said that these lawsuits were "filed as a distraction." Baturin also said that he began preparing new lawsuits against his sister, including a lawsuit over 25 percent of Inteko shares, which, in his opinion, continue to belong to him. However, already on February 18, 2007, Inteko's spokesman Terebkov stated that "the parties renounce mutual property and other claims."

On February 19, 2007, it became known that Baturina transferred 99 percent of the shares of Inteko to the closed-end mutual investment fund (ZPIF) Continental, which is managed by the company of the same name. The media reported that the fund in terms of net assets (82.8 billion rubles) became a leader in the Russian market. Aleksey Chalenko, adviser to the president of Inteko, noted that "this was done as part of the company's strategy," Continental Management Company, according to RBC, declined to comment. Analysts did not come to a consensus about why Baturina took such a step. The following assumptions were made: the transfer of Inteko's assets to a closed-end mutual fund may insure the company against possible hostile takeovers, may also provide it with additional tax benefits, and may give Baturina the opportunity to quietly change the structure of property ownership. In 2007, in an interview with Vedomosti, Baturina confirmed that the Continental mutual fund belongs to her 100 percent. She called the structuring of Inteko through mutual funds "just a method of packing assets" ("How the money is in a bag, and not in a wallet - that's the whole difference").

On January 15, 2008, the Russian Land Bank named Baturina, who owned more than 20 percent of its shares, the main buyer of an additional issue of bank shares in the amount of 1 billion rubles. It was reported that after the buyback of shares, Baturina's share in the bank would exceed 90 percent. There was also an assumption by analysts that it would buy out the remaining shares of other shareholders of the bank.

In July 2008, Kommersant wrote about Inteko's participation in several development projects in Morocco through an affiliated company, Kudla Group. With reference to the words of the representative of the Department of Tourism of the Tetouan region of the Kingdom of Morocco, Mustafa Agundjabe, the publication reported that the company will invest more than 325 million euros in the construction of resort real estate in the country.

In December of the same year, CJSC "Inteko" Baturina won a lawsuit against the publication "Gazeta" for the protection of business reputation. The Federal Arbitration Court of the Moscow District ordered Gazeta to refute information about the conspiracy of the Moscow authorities with three leading property developers - Mirax Service (a subsidiary of Mirax Group), Inteko and the PIK group of companies - in order to divide the capital's housing and communal services market. The court did not see the guilt of State Duma deputy Galina Khovanskaya, on the basis of whose words the journalists made such a conclusion (Khovanskaya herself insisted that her words were quoted inaccurately in the article).

Baturina is the richest woman in Russia. According to Forbes magazine published in 2004, her personal fortune was $1.1 billion. Forbes experts estimated the turnover of the Inteko group at $525 million. At the same time, they admitted that it was not possible to accurately assess Baturina's assets, since, firstly, Inteko is a very closed company; secondly, she participated in almost all major metropolitan projects as a co-investor, contractor or subcontractor. According to the same Forbes, published in 2006, Baturina's fortune was already estimated at $2.3 billion. In August 2005, Inteko announced the purchase of shares in Gazprom and Sberbank. The company did not disclose which stakes Inteko owns (according to data for the first quarter of 2008, the share of Baturina - her mutual fund Kontinetal - in Sberbank was 0.38 percent). In 2006, information was published that Baturina and entrepreneur Suleiman Kerimov own more than 4.6 percent of Gazprom's shares for two (according to Vedomosti, they transferred the right to vote with their stakes to Alexei Miller, Chairman of the Board of Gazprom OJSC) . In February 2007, there were reports in the media that at the end of 2006, Baturina acquired shares in Rosneft, although this fact was not reflected in Inteko's financial statements for the last quarter of the year.

On April 19, 2007, the rating of the richest citizens of Russia was published in the Russian version of Forbes magazine. As in 2006, Baturina became the only woman included in the list: her fortune was estimated at 3.1 billion dollars (in 2006 it was 2.4 billion). In the spring of 2008, she entered the list of the richest inhabitants of the planet at number 253: Baturina's fortune, as reported by the American Forbes, at the time of the rating, was estimated at $ 4.2 billion.

Baturina plays tennis, skiing well. He drives a car, has the third category in shooting from a small-caliber rifle. Baturina is also seriously engaged in horseback riding. The media wrote that the well-known ophthalmologist surgeon and businessman Svyatoslav Fedorov once addicted her to this occupation. In an interview, Baturina recalled: “It so happened that I somehow immediately got into the saddle and rode. Then they began to give horses to the mayor, and the animals had to be taken care of somehow. Since 1999, Baturina has been mentioned in the media as the chairman of the Equestrian Federation In January 2005, Baturina was dismissed from the post of President of the Equestrian Federation sport of the Russian Federation, the deputy who took her place State Duma Gennady Seleznev argued that the interests of Russian athletes were poorly taken into account by the former leadership of the federation. Although there were many competitions, including high level, for example, the Moscow Mayor's Cup, which was one of the stages of the World Cup with large prize money, but, according to Seleznev, the organizers themselves chose those who were to take part in them. The best athletes were invited from abroad, their arrival and accommodation in Russia were paid for by the organizing committee. The Russians invited by the Organizing Committee, whose number was limited, could not compete with the first numbers of the Old World. As a result, all the prize money was taken away by foreign guests. The Building Business publication noted that when Baturina was not re-elected to the post of head of the federation, she was "purely humanly offended", but noticed that she would not leave her horses anyway and would now take care of the affairs of the Moscow federation.

According to a number of media reports, even Baturina's enemies noted that she had invested a lot of money in equestrian sports. The media indicated that she had sincere feelings for horses. "Ordinary horsemen", according to them, said that Baturina keeps disabled horses in his personal stable and provides them with a decent existence. However, according to Building Business, horses for Baturina are not only a hobby, but also a business. A few years ago, Inteko bought dilapidated buildings of cowsheds in the Kaliningrad region in order to revive the Weedern stud farm, founded in the 18th century, where the Imperial Union of Private Horse Breeders was based until the 1920s - a partner of the largest in East Prussia Trakehner stud farm. In the autumn of 2005, the reconstruction of the factory buildings was completed ("with the preservation of historical facades") and the first stage of the "Weedern" was put into operation, work began on the reproduction of the Trakehner and Hanoverian breeds of horses. It is expected that this enterprise will become a source of considerable income: the second stage of the project includes the construction of hotels, a restaurant, the creation of a bypass road and the improvement of nearby territories. All this should attract tourists.

From her marriage to Luzhkov, Baturina has two daughters: Alena was born in 1992, Olga - in March 1994. The media also mentioned Baturina's sister - Natalya Nikolaevna Evtushenkova, head of the IBRD Office and wife of the chairman of the board of directors and the main shareholder of AFK Sistema Vladimir Evtushenkov

Elena Nikolaevna Baturina was born on March 8, 1963 in Moscow. Today, the Russian woman billionaire is 55 years old. At the time she graduated State University management, and the public is best known as the wife of former Moscow Mayor Yuri Luzhkov and ex-president construction business giant CJSC Inteko (the company is currently sold).

Baturina Elena is not just a Russian entrepreneur, she is also a philanthropist and a generous philanthropist. Her husband sincerely considers his wife a talented manager and businessman, and appreciates her infinitely.

In 2011, after the sale of Inteko, Baturina relocated her assets abroad. Today she is the owner of a chain of hotels not only in our country, but also in Ireland, Austria and the Czech Republic. Elena has a renewable energy project in Italy and Greece, as well as a manufacturing company specializing in membrane construction in Germany - her projects can be seen in the photo. In her youth, Elena Baturina wisely reasoned that a lot of money was in construction and real estate, and hit the mark. Baturina owns some development projects both in Europe and in the USA. Elena actively invests in funds related to development activities in the field of residential and commercial real estate, in particular in America and the UK.

Titles

For 2017 in the ranking of world billionaires by Forbes versions, Elena Baturina, who owns a fortune of $ 1 billion, retained the title of the wealthiest woman in Russia, the only Russian billionaire in the world. And Elena has retained this title for twelve years in a row.

In 2018, the general condition of Elena Baturina, who retained the title the richest lady Russia, is 1.2 billion dollars. In the general list of the international glossy publication, she takes 79th place.

Made herself

Also according to Forbes, Baturina is the only independent entrepreneur of her kind who built her business in the construction industry, she is ranked 55th in the world's list of female self-made billionaires. There are 227 women on this list, and more than 75% percent of them are heirs of the state from their family members. And Elena did not have the start-up capital inherited from her mom and dad.

Baturina has made a name for herself investing in real estate. It actively invests in alternative energy European countries and continues to invest in real estate.

In addition, Elena Baturina is the owner of a huge collection of expensive retro cars, numbering fifty copies. The woman also collects antique porcelain of domestic production.

Facts, scandals

Being married to Moscow Mayor Yuri Luzhkov, Elena Baturina created the Inteko company, which was mainly engaged in development and construction.

Elena is the founder charitable foundation BE OPEN, whose activities are aimed at supporting young talents: scientists, designers, writers and architects.

In 2004, Baturina became a participant in the scandal associated with the tragedy on February 15 - then, during the collapse of the roof of the Transvaal water park building in Moscow's Yasenevo, 28 visitors died, more than 100 people were injured (according to the official version). In March 2004, the Kommersant publication reported that the Baturins were lending to the Terra-Oil company, which controlled the activities of the ill-fated water park. A year later, in March 2005, the Tverskoy District Court of Moscow partially satisfied Baturina's claim for the protection of honor and dignity, recognizing the information published by the newspaper as false.

Another scandal took place in 2006. There was information that the publishing house Axel Springer Russia destroyed the entire circulation of the December Forbes, doing this in order not to print an article about Baturina and her business. The American Forbes demanded that Axel Springer release the issue in its original layout. This is what was done. Two months later, in February 2007, Inteko filed two lawsuits in the amount of 106,500 rubles each against the hostile publishing house and against the editor-in-chief personally. The company lost its first lawsuit in the autumn of 2007, and earlier, in the spring of 2007, the lawsuit against the editor-in-chief was satisfied. In early 2008, after changing the subject of Inteco's claim, the case against Axel Springer Russia was won by the entrepreneur.

Since 2008, Elena Baturina has been the owner of a luxurious mansion in the Austrian Kochau, then she moved to a larger estate of three thousand square meters in the same area in Aurach near Kitzbühel. She didn't sell that house.

In 2018, Elena reached retirement age, and despite the fact that she lives in Europe as a Russian citizen, she can retire.

Biography

The personal life of Elena Baturina has always been of interest to the public, many shook their heads with skepticism - they say that the mayor's wife simply cannot but be successful, and her relatives, most likely from the Rockefeller clan, do not get tired of helping. However, little Lena had no rich relatives. The first Russian lady billionaire was born on International Women's Day, March 8, 1963, in an ordinary Moscow family, where mom and dad worked at a factory. Seven years earlier, her brother Victor had been born. Lena went to the same school as her brother, and in his footsteps she went to enter the same university as Viktor - to the evening department of the University of Management - SUM. In their youth, Elena Baturina and her brother were very friendly.

From 1980 to 1982 the future billionaire worked at the largest enterprise of cutting tools Fraser, her parents had previously worked there. She worked at the Moscow Institute of Economic Problems of the Development of the National Economy, at the Union of Cooperators, and was also present on the commission of the Moscow City Executive Committee responsible for cooperative activities. In 1986, Elena Nikolaevna Baturina received a diploma in higher education, and since 1989 began her career as an entrepreneur.

Business

They started the business with their brother together. The very first project of a talented girl was a cooperative on shares with her brother. Their company developed software by introducing computer technology into various areas activities. Elena Baturina was very tenacious, grasping and energetic - whoever you ask - in her youth. Photos of the business woman and her brother gradually began to appear in the chronicles of successful business projects, she gradually gained popularity and increased her capital.

In 1991, Victor and Elena created a company called Inteko, its activities included the production of polymer products. The company was owned by her sister for 99%, and her brother Victor - for the remaining 1%. Interestingly, the production of plastics was deployed on the basis of the Moscow Oil Refining Plant, which was controlled by the capital's government. As a result of its extensive activities, Inteko has become the owner of one third of the plastic products market.

But the production of plastic chairs, basins and buckets accounted for only 10% of the group concern's turnover, which was recently valued at $525 million. Operations with commercial real estate, investments in shares of state factories and factories, construction brought the organization the remaining 90% of income. Inteko bought shares in Gazprom and Sberbank, Oskolcement and Atakaycement.

Elena Nikolaevna Baturina was actively involved in financial support, in particular, companies operating in the field of education and sports, culture and art. She has repeatedly acted as a sponsor of international golf tournaments, the largest equestrian competitions.

With an investment of $900 million annually, insurance against political turmoil in the form of three reliable pillars - land, debt and connections - Inteco has reached incredible proportions. Elena Baturina wisely used the services of friendly construction companies associated with Inteko, when it was necessary to acquire something or implement an investment project.

Of special interest to the hostess successful company represented the area related to the provision of affordable housing. She helped Russian families in various cities of Russia with the purchase of apartments, and in 2006 Baturina received the position of deputy head of the interdepartmental group within the framework of the national program for the construction of affordable housing.

It was 2009, the company "Inteko" put an end to the construction of a multifunctional complex in Astana called "Moscow-Park". It includes a four-star hotel, business and shopping and entertainment centers, office space, a panoramic elevator, cafes and restaurants. Literally a few months later, in 2010, Elena Nikolaevna opens the New Peterhof complex in St. Petersburg - a chain of hotels.

Support for Russian artists

Since 2007, Elena Baturina has supported the tradition of our artists performing abroad. In 2008, with the participation and assistance of Baturina, concert performances of Russian dance groups took place in Austria, concerts of classical music and folk songs were organized, and everything was timed to coincide with Orthodox Christmas.

Benefactor, hotelier

For those who suffered from the fires, Elena Nikolaevna Baturina helped with the construction of a preschool educational institution in the Tula region. In 2011, she donated porcelain from the Imperial Factory from her personal collection to the Tsaritsyno Museum, and in the same year the legendary Inteco was sold. Elena developed an active real estate business around the world, in 2012 it became known about the opening of the Quisisana Palace hotel in Karlovy Vary, in 2013 the Morrison hotel in Dublin began operation, and in 2016 the entrepreneur acquired several office buildings in Brooklyn, a prestigious New York area, next to the sports arena "Barclays Center".

A photo of Elena Baturina in April 2018 appeared in the media in connection with the sale of one of the purchased Austrian hotels and a golf club in the city of Kitzbühel, which for 11 years have not reached the planned profitable indicators. The amount of the transaction did not become a secret and amounted to forty-five million euros.

Over the course of all eleven years, the entrepreneur has invested more than 100 million euros in the hotel business, but this project did not turn out to be profitable, despite the active demand from customers. Well, there are spots in the sun.

Spouse, family

Yuri Mikhailovich Luzhkov - the former mayor of the capital - is crazy about his wife. Since 1991, they have been together, two daughters were born in marriage. For Luzhkov, this marriage was the second, and Yuri Mikhailovich is 27 years older than his wife. The children of Elena Baturina and the former owner of Moscow today are successful business women, like their mother. Daughter Elena was born in 1992, Olga - two years later. Before Luzhkov left the post of mayor, both girls were students of Moscow State University, Elena studied at the Faculty of World Politics, Olga was more attracted to the economy. Together with their mother in 2011, the girls moved to London, where Baturina Sr. developed her business, and her daughters continued their education at the college at the University.

Photos of Baturina Elena Nikolaevna with her daughters are not often seen on the World Wide Web, however, it is known that the heirs are very successful ladies. The eldest daughter Elena is currently implementing business projects in Slovakia. The company Alener, founded by her, develops a series of cosmetics and various perfumes. As for Olga, she is a bachelor from New York University and also has a master's degree in hotel business. In 2015, she opened the Herbarium Bar in Kitzbühel, Austria. This is an institution where, in addition to alcoholic beverages offered herbal.

The personal life of Elena Baturina in 2016 acquired a new meaning and a new breath - Yuri Mikhailovich does not get tired of making fantastic gifts to his wife. The couple celebrated their anniversary - a quarter of a century life together, and they celebrated this event with a wedding in the church. Truly, such a relationship, carried through for many years and not poisoned by huge money and power, should be sealed before the Lord.

Hobby

Elena Baturina advocates an active lifestyle. She is very fond of equestrian sports, among her hobbies are golf, tennis, skiing. The billionaire has collections of unique photographs and works of art (including the work of the British Francis Bacon, the legendary artist), and Elena is also partial to vintage cars, of which she owns about fifty.

What does Baturina do today

Today interesting biography Elena Baturina does not cease to be replenished with new achievements in the field of development, but the woman continues to engage in help and support with pleasure. The efforts of a business woman are concentrated in the field of hotel business and construction. Love for animals has only intensified over time - together with her husband, Elena manages the Weedern concern, horses of various breeds are bred here. Baturina established a number of charitable organizations called "Noosphere", which provide assistance on a gratuitous basis, in particular, in matters of education, as well as fostering tolerance and tolerance towards people of a different faith. Finally, Elena promotes young talents, contributing to the realization of worthwhile ideas of young people. Her activities have always been connected with helping people, and no one, even the most bilious envious people, will dare to say that Luzhkov's wife Elena Baturina is trying to fill her pockets stronger, forgetting about good deeds.

Undoubtedly, the figure of Elena Baturina occupied, occupies and will occupy one of the key positions on the Olympus of Russian entrepreneurship. The wife of the former mayor of the capital is considered the richest woman not only in our country, but also abroad. In 2010, Elena Nikolaevna had financial assets, the amount of which was estimated at $ 2.9 billion.

Of course, without certain business qualities, she would hardly have been able to “put together” such huge fortune. And she has them: toughness, assertiveness, determination, cold-bloodedness ... Largely due to these qualities, she succeeded in business. However, not everyone agrees that good luck in business affairs would always accompany Baturina if she were not married to an influential official.

Would Elena Nikolaevna really have achieved little if not for the help of her husband, who held a high position in the capital's government? Let's consider this question in more detail.

Curriculum vitae

Baturina Elena Nikolaevna is a native of Moscow. She was born on March 8, 1963 in a family of workers. Father and mother worked at the factory from morning to evening to feed big family. Baturina, in addition to her brother Victor, has cousins and cousin. Elena Nikolaevna once let slip in an interview that she actively involves her relatives in the management because she completely trusts them.

While still a child, the future wife of the capital's mayor was very often sick: her lungs were weak. Nevertheless, this did not prevent the girl, who grew up in the proletarian Vykhino district, from developing such an important quality for a businessman as determination.

Start of work

Having received a matriculation certificate, Baturina becomes a worker at the Fraser plant, since she did not enter the university.

After some time, Elena Nikolaevna became a student of the evening department of the Institute of Management named after Ordzhonikidze. In parallel with this, she works at the Institute for Economic Problems of the Integrated Development of the National Economy of the City of Moscow.

Fateful meeting

Baturina Elena Nikolaevna in her youth became a member of the working group of the commission of the Moscow City Executive Committee on individual labor and cooperative activities. In a new capacity, she began to study the problems of the public catering system. At the same time, she received her first experience of conducting cooperative activities. At this time, a fateful meeting with Yuri Mikhailovich Luzhkov, who headed the commission in the executive committee, takes place. After some time, Yuri Mikhailovich becomes a widower, and Elena Nikolaevna marries him. It wasn't love affair at work: the relationship arose at a time when they no longer worked together.

Starting a business

Elena Nikolaevna, whose biography contains a lot of interesting and remarkable things, in the early 90s takes her first steps in the entrepreneurial field.

Together with her brother Victor, she creates the Inteko cooperative. The production of polymer products was chosen as the profile of activity. The political career of her husband Baturina developed rapidly, and soon he took the post of mayor of Moscow. Naturally, Yuri Mikhailovich helped his wife's business develop in every possible way, providing Inteko with profitable municipal orders. Over time, Elena Nikolaevna's company turned into a major supplier of plastics and organized a powerful production area on the basis of the capital's oil refinery. An enterprise for the production of polypropylene was built, and very soon Inteko won a third of the entire plastic products market.

Business is booming

In the late 90s, the geography of entrepreneurial activity of the wife of the capital's mayor expanded significantly. For example, Inteko became the main developer of the Chess City (City-Chess) project in Kalmykia. It was Baturina with her brainchild that became a defendant in the investigation into the misuse of budget funds during the construction of the above object. Nevertheless, Elena Nikolaevna, whose photo was printed on the front pages of the regional media in connection with the incident, decided to participate in the deputy elections of Kalmykia, but did not win them.

Baturina focuses her efforts on business. Very soon, Inteko turns into a large investment and construction holding, which occupied almost 25% of the panel housing market. The company establishes a division of monolithic construction.

In 2002, Elena Nikolaevna (position - president of Inteko) buys several large cement plants. Some time later, the owner of the construction holding announced the issue. Most of the shares of Inteko belonged to Baturina (99%) and only 1% of the securities were owned by her brother Viktor. Later, Luzhkov's wife announces the creation of her own real estate structure called Magistrate.

Illegal scandals

At the beginning of the 2000s, Baturina's construction holding was at the center of scandals. In particular, in 2003, pen sharks informed the public about the illegal activities of Elena Nikolaevna's subsidiary (Inteko-agro), which was buying up agricultural land in the Belgorod region under "gray schemes".

Then the "daughter" of "Inteko" invaded the sphere of commercial interests of his son, preventing the development of the Yakovlevsky mine. Shirokiy was triggered by events such as the attack on an executive director and the murder of a lawyer for Inteko Corporation.

The Russians were even more excited by the news of the theft in the Bank of Moscow. Journalists could not ignore this fact. According to the employees of the printed edition, Elena Nikolaevna (Yekaterinburg, the newspaper "Vecherniye Vedomosti") was interrogated as a witness in the case of fraud in a banking institution. At the same time, Asnis's lawyer had written evidence of her non-involvement in the crime.

Changing priorities in business

In 2005, Baturina sells cement plants and temporarily leaves the panel construction market. But after a while, Inteko returns to its profile again, having bought the Verkhnebakansky cement plant in the Kuban.

Then Elena Nikolaevna announced that her brother was "retiring" and was no longer the owner of the holding. Luzhkov's wife decides to buy back his shares and become the sole owner of Inteko. However, he considered this state of affairs unfair and wanted to return part of the shares. As a result, a lawsuit was started, which ultimately ended in the reconciliation of the parties.

After he was removed from the post of mayor of Moscow, Elena Nikolaevna began to sell off her business assets. In the fall of 2011, the Inteko commercial structure was put up for sale.

Hospitality

Since the end political career Luzhkova Baturina lives abroad with her husband. However, "in a foreign land" Elena Nikolaevna did not lose her entrepreneurial acumen and invested in the hotel business. She bought the Grand Tirolia Hotel for almost 40 million euros. It annually hosts an awards ceremony for the best journalists covering sports life. Baturina also owns the Morrison Hotel in Ireland and the Quisisana Palace mini-hotel in the Czech Republic.

Elena Nikolaevna's hotels are managed by Martinez Hotels & Resorts, which is located in Austria. The hotel owner plans to expand the geography of her business, in which about three hundred million dollars have already been invested.

Personal life

The wife of Yuri Luzhkov always tried to stay in the shadow of her influential patron. She reluctantly took part in the ceremonial events that were regularly held in the metropolitan metropolis. Sometimes there was a feeling that Elena Nikolaevna, whose personal life has developed the best way, in every possible way eschews publicity. The business lady also ignored the official receptions hosted by the mayors of other cities.

Outside of business, her interests include golf, horseback riding, skiing, and reading.

In a marriage with Luzhkov, she gave birth to two daughters - Elena and Olga. They study in England. Relations with her brother Victor leave much to be desired, since the litigation initiated by her relative in 2007 is still fresh in her memory.

After Yuri Mikhailovich was relieved of his post, the Luzhkov couple moved to the British capital. The ex-mayor expressed hope that the family would someday be able to return to Russia, when the authorities turn their anger into mercy.