Golf club forfeited in wealth order has been sold

A general view picture of a bunker and part of a course at the Mill Ride golf club in Ascot, Berkshire.Image source, Getty Images/Washington Post
Image caption,

The golf club has been sold but it is unclear who it has been sold to

  • Published

A Berkshire golf club forfeited by a jailed banker's wife has been sold, while a Knightsbridge townhouse she used to own has had its asking price cut by £1.25m.

Zamira Hajiyeva agreed to give up Mill Ride Golf Club in Ascot and the home, which has had its price reduced from £14.75m to £13.5m, external, following a six-year National Crime Agency (NCA) fraud investigation.

Savills, which has been managing their sales, confirmed the golf club has been sold but could not confirm who has bought it.

Mrs Hajiyeva, who spent £16m at Harrods in a decade, is in line to keep 30% of the sales' proceeds, and the government will take 70%.

Mrs Hajiyeva's husband, Jahangir, was the chairman of the state-controlled International Bank of Azerbaijan from 2001 to 2015 and was later given a 16-year jail sentence for fraud and embezzlement.

The NCA said last year it believed the golf club and house were obtained as a "direct result of large-scale fraud and embezzlement, false accounting and money laundering".

Zamira Hajiyeva photographed wearing a white shirt and sunglasses at an appearance at Westminster Magistrates' Court on 24 June 2019.Image source, Getty Images/Bloomberg
Image caption,

Zamira Hajiyeva will keep 30% of the proceeds made from the golf club and townhouse's sale

It said it had found "no reasonable explanation" for the source of funds used to buy both of them.

The golf course was developed in the 1990s. The club's website shows that it is not accepting any new members and that it has a waiting list in place.

The Walton Street home is a five-minute walk from Harrods, where Mrs Hajiyeva's lavish spending included shelling out £4.9m on jewellery.

A law firm working for Mrs Hajiyeva last year said she and her family were "happy to now be able to move on with their lives" and she had taken the decision "to settle the proceedings because it proved impossible to defend them".

The home of Zamira Hajiyeva, on Walton Street, Knightsbridge, a smart, white townhouse on an expensive London street, with cars parked along the side of the pavement.Image source, Getty Images
Image caption,

The asking price for the property in Walton Street, Knightsbridge, has been cut

Gherson LLP said: "Throughout the course of the UK proceedings, Mrs Hajiyeva's husband, who is detained in Azerbaijan, held information potentially crucial to the case.

"However, for the duration of the UK case, the Azerbaijani authorities deliberately denied Mrs Hajiyeva and her UK lawyers access to Mr Hajiyev in prison in Azerbaijan."

Get in touch

Do you have a story BBC Berkshire should cover?