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    What are Nigel Farage’s allies doing in ‘beautiful’ and ‘cheap’ Montenegro?

    adminBy adminJuly 10, 2026No Comments7 Mins Read
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    What are Nigel Farage’s allies doing in ‘beautiful’ and ‘cheap’ Montenegro?
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    Allies of Nigel Farage have built significant corporate and political interests in Montenegro, where the prime minister wants to turn the country into a crypto hub.

    Members of the Reform UK leader’s circle — including crypto billionaire Christopher Harborne, party board member Gawain Towler, former Reform treasurer Mehrtash A’zami and longtime aide George Cottrell — are among those to have established a presence in Montenegro in recent years.

    Filings show that Harborne, whose £5mn gift to Farage has prompted a parliamentary standards probe, registered a company called Longevity Biotech Systems in the coastal town of Tivat in 2023, shortly before the party of crypto investor Milojko Spajić won Montenegro’s parliamentary election.

    Towler, a former communications chief for Farage, registered a company in Tivat around the same time. He told the FT that he and other Reform associates were interested in Montenegro because it was “beautiful” and “cheap”.

    The same year, A’zami also registered a business, Maxim Enterprise, in the town. A’zami ran a British crypto company called Crypto Concierge between 2021 and 2022 before it was dissolved.

    Farage’s relationship with the crypto industry has come under scrutiny after the revelation of Harborne’s gift, which was not declared. The Reform leader has denied that the money had any influence over his policies, which include strong support for digital currencies.

    Spajić is an even bigger booster for the industry, expressing hope that mining and trading cryptocurrencies could one day account for almost a third of Montenegro’s GDP.

    Some long-term Farage associates, but not Harborne or A’zami, have been linked to the successful 2023 campaigns of Spajić’s Europe Now! Movement.

    Their reported support is unusual, given that Spajić has pushed for Montenegro to join the EU. Farage’s other links across Europe are almost exclusively with anti-Brussels parties.

    Crypto, however, provides common ground.

    Milojko Spajić toasts champagne with party members, smiling and celebrating at a podium.
    Milojko Spajić, centre, celebrates with party members on the day of Montenegro’s parliamentary election in June 2023 © Savo Prelevic/AFP via Getty Images

    Reform wants a regulatory “Big Bang 2” to make Britain a “crypto hub”. Harborne, a significant investor in cryptocurrency issuer Tether who has lobbied for the industry, is the party’s biggest donor.

    Farage has said the £5mn gift was purely personal and that Harborne did not ask for anything in return for this or his donations to Reform. This week he forced a by-election in an attempt to draw a line under media and parliamentary scrutiny.

    Cottrell, a Farage aide who was jailed in the US for fraud, has been present in Montenegro for several years. He has been linked to crypto businesses by Montenegrin government officials and through claims in an English High Court case. He denies these links.

    Local media reported last year that Cottrell’s political consultancy, Geostrategy, which has offices in Montenegro, had created content advising Spajić on how to retain popularity.

    Cottrell’s lawyers said the content was “general in nature” and had been “misrepresented” or “misinterpreted”.

    Andrej Milović, a former justice minister in Spajić’s government, claimed in 2024 that Cottrell had secretly financed the then candidate’s election campaign.

    Gawain Towler speaking outdoors with an open mouth during an interview on College Green.
    Reform UK board member Gawain Towler registered a company in Tivat, Montenegro, in 2023 © Pjr News/Alamy

    Lawyers for Cottrell said he had made no donations to Spajić or Europe Now!, and was blocked from doing so due to his citizenship. They added that the allegations were part of a “politically motivated disinformation campaign”.

    Chris Bruni-Lowe, a former campaign director for the UK Independence Party under Farage, has claimed to have coined Spajić’s 2023 election slogan, “It’s Time”. Bruni-Lowe has worked for parties on both the left and right since leaving Ukip.

    Towler has said he worked under contract for Europe Now!’s campaign, providing “strategic media advice” and social media content. 

    The links between Farage’s associates and Montenegro appear to date back to the period after 2017, when Cottrell was released from prison in the US.

    Cottrell, nicknamed “Posh George” because of his upper-class background, started to use Montenegro as a base. Farage was pictured in Tivat in 2019 with Cottrell, whom he has described as “like a son”.

    Cottrell is the owner of a Tivat-based company called Private Family Office, which was set up in 2020.

    Nigel Farage and George Cottrell walk among a crowd of pro-Brexit activists and media during the March to Leave protest in London.
    Cottrell, left, with Farage in London in 2019 © Mark Kerrison/Alamy

    Harborne registered Longevity Biotech Systems weeks after a presidential election that brought Spajić’s party to power. Before the company became inactive earlier this year, Harborne was its executive director.

    Private jet data posted online shows that planes linked to Harborne have taken at least nine trips to Montenegro over the past three years, including one flight that left on May 6 2023 from Biggin Hill, a short drive from Farage’s family home. Two trips took place in September 2025.

    Representatives for Harborne did not respond to requests for comment.

    Towler has said he was invited by Cottrell to visit Montenegro in 2020 after having been concerned about alleged harassment of the country’s Orthodox Church.

    Do Kwon is escorted by a police officer while being taken to court, with a photographer capturing the scene.
    Do Kwon, the cryptocurrency entrepreneur, is escorted to court in Podgorica, Montenegro, in 2023 © Stevo Vasiljevic/Reuters

    Crypto regulation was a flashpoint in Montenegro’s politics around 2023 because of the arrest in the country of Do Kwon, a South Korean businessman behind the collapsed cryptocurrency company Terraform Labs.

    A US court document later emerged showing that Spajić had been an early investor in Terraform Labs. Kwon later pleaded guilty to fraud in the US and was sentenced to 15 years in prison.

    In June 2023, after Europe Now! came to power but before Spajić was named prime minister, the Montenegrin government confiscated a crypto-to-cash conversion machine at a casino in Tivat called Salon Privé.

    Shaped like the sleek superyachts docked nearby, the casino is staffed by hostesses who check passports, or pictures of them, before members can access the slot machines and a VIP room. 

    A sign outside the linked beach bar says clothing is optional but that relaxation is mandatory, adding: “What happens here, stays here.”

    This type of machine was not permitted in Montenegro because the country lacked adequate rules governing the crypto industry, the finance ministry was quoted as saying at the time. Aleksandar Damjanović, the then finance minister, told local press after the raid that the machine was “linked to Cottrell”.

    The exterior of Salon Prive Casino and bar, lined with palm trees and outdoor seating along a waterfront promenade.
    Salon Privé, a casino in Tivat, has a sign that reads: ‘What happens here, stays here’ © Dmitrii Pridannikov/Dreamstime

    Lawyers for Cottrell said the “raid” was an inspection carried out by the finance ministry, and denied that he had any involvement with “any crypto ATM machine at Salon Privé”.

    Gustaf Sander — a Swedish businessman who, corporate filings show, was an executive director of Cottrell’s company Private Family Office between November 2020 and October 2022 — was described in reports of a press conference in June 2022 as the casino’s chief executive and director. 

    Cottrell’s lawyers said that Sander had not worked for the two companies at the same time. Sander did not respond to a request for comment. Salon Privé and Reform did not respond to requests for comment.

    Montenegro has also attracted interest among Donald Trump’s Maga movement.

    Trump’s pick for ambassador to Serbia, Mark Brnovich, met Spajić in Tivat in 2024, and met Farage several times, pictures posted online show.

    Mark Brnovich speaks at a podium during a news conference.
    Former Arizona attorney-general Mark Brnovich was described by Cottrell as a ‘mentor’ © Mark Henie/The Republic/USA Today via Reuters

    Brnovich was attorney-general of Arizona while Cottrell was serving time there. In his book How to Launder Money: A Guide for Law Enforcement, Prosecutors and Policymakers, Cottrell describes Brnovich as a “mentor”.

    Brnovich’s ambassadorial nomination was ultimately dropped, and he died earlier this year from a heart attack, his family said. A YouGov poll published on Friday found that 73 per cent of Britons, including 40 per cent of Reform voters, now view Farage as sleazy.

    Montenegro’s next parliamentary election is scheduled to take place by next June. Geostrategy posted adverts earlier this year seeking to hire a political analyst and an AI adoption strategist in Podgorica, Montenegro’s capital.

    These jobs would not be “specific to any campaign”, Cottrell’s lawyers said.

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