Daniel Kinahan sanctions ‘nowt to do with me’, says Tyson Fury
Tyson Fury insists the recent sanctions against Daniel Kinahan are “nowt to do with me” and says he has “absolutely zero” business with the alleged crime boss.
The world heavyweight champion will face Dillian Whyte at Wembley Stadium in London on Saturday, in an event set to be attended by 94,000 spectators, but the build-up to the all-British bout has been overshadowed.
Kinahan, a man who has advised Fury in the past, was last week named as being a head of the Kinahan crime gang and hit with worldwide financial sanctions by the United States government, who have offered a $5 million (€4.6 million) reward for information on the group leading to the arrest and conviction of its leaders.
Kinahan, who has always denied any wrongdoing, is alleged to be one of the leaders of a cartel the US authorities accuse of smuggling drugs, money laundering and bringing violence to “the most vulnerable in society”.
WBC president Mauricio Sulaiman released a statement on Monday stressing “at no time” did he have a working relationship with the Dublin man.
A day after US sanctions were brought against Dubai-based Kinahan, a virtual press conference took place to preview the fight at Wembley, but, with a moderator on hand to pick the journalists permitted to ask questions, Fury was not quizzed on the issue.
He did, however, address the elephant in the room after Tuesday’s open workout at BOXPARK Wembley.
Asked if he had any business with Kinahan, Fury said: “Zero, absolutely zero. It’s none of my business. I keep my own business to myself, that’s it.
“Has it been a distraction? Not really, it’s got nowt to do with me, has it?
“If I say, ‘There’s a war going on in Ukraine’, and people ask me about that, it’s got nowt to do with me. I keep my