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> A question for Varamar’s shareholders: do you know who is really damaging the company’s reputation?
Mr. Alexander Varvarenko says he is surprised that criticism is directed at him personally rather than at the investors behind the company.
That “surprise” is difficult to understand.
Let me make one thing absolutely clear: this is not personal. This is business.
No one is attacking Mr. Varvarenko on a personal level. The issue is much simpler. Varamar Shipping DMCC has failed to pay an undisputed brokerage
commission for nearly three months. Instead of allowing the matter to be resolved in a normal commercial manner, Mr. Varvarenko personally intervened,
imposed a so-called “fine” via WhatsApp, blocked the commission payment, and demanded a public “repentance” statement in favor of the Varamar Group
as a precondition for paying a fairly and lawfully earned brokerage commission.
That is not a personal matter. That is a business matter ONLY.
What makes the situation even more serious is that such conduct damages not only the company’s standing, but also the interests and reputation
of its shareholders. A lawful commission remains unpaid. And instead of resolving the issue properly, pressure was allegedly
applied in an attempt to force a humiliating “letter of repentance.”
> So the logical questions to Varamar’s shareholders are:
Are you aware that Mr. Varvarenko personally interfered in the commission payment process and blocked it?
2. Are you aware that this undisputed commission has remained unpaid for nearly three months?
3. Are you aware that this conduct is damaging the reputation of both the company and its shareholders?
4. Do you find this situation normal?
This is not about personalities. It is not about emotions. It is not about private feelings.
It is about a company failing to honor its obligation, and about one individual personally stepping in to make that failure worse.


