Russia freezes MMA star Khabib’s bank accounts
Russia’s Federal Tax Service has frozen bank accounts belonging to former UFC lightweight champion Khabib Nurmagomedov after the MMA star ran up a tax debt with the country’s authorities.
The overdue amount exceeds 79 million rubles ($1 million) as of July 1, RT Russian reported on Monday, citing the Federal Tax Service database. At the same time, local news outlet Mash media claimed that Nurmagomedov’s debt had amounted to 297 million rubles ($3.4 million).
The Dagestan-born MMA fighter went 29-0 in an unbeaten professional career, defeating the likes of Conor McGregor, Dustin Poirier, and Justin Gaethje before retiring from the sport four years ago. In 2022, he was inducted into the UFC Hall of Fame.
Since calling time on his sporting career, the former UFC lightweight champion has embarked on a number of business ventures, including dietary supplements, a restaurant chain, and hotels.
In May, Mash media claimed that bank accounts belonging to Eagle FC promotion and a charity fund belonging to Nurmagomedov had been blocked due to a $3 million debt. The sportsman reportedly relinquished ownership of several firms, but his relatives and close associates allegedly remained in control of some of them.
These moves were reportedly what attracted the attention of the country’s tax authorities, which launched a probe into the former UFC champion and found irregularities in documents, leading to the closure of some businesses belonging to him or his relatives.
Mash also claimed that Russian authorities had suspected that Nurmagomedov may have used the money he failed to pay into the coffers of the Russian state to purchase hotels and start-ups in Türkiye and the UAE.
Last week, Dagestan security forces raided a training facility owned by Nurmagomedov as part of an investigation into a series of terrorist attacks in the southern Russian republic in June. A former MMA fighter who reportedly trained at Khabib's gym, Gadzhimurad Kagirov, has been identified as one of the terrorists who took part in the coordinated attacks. He was killed in the ensuing counterterrorism operation.
Nurmagomedov denied that Kagirov had been a member of his team, but admitted that the wrestler may have previously trained at his gym.