The Dutch newspaper De Telegraaf reported Monday that a group of activists had taken up residence in the empty, five-story home over the weekend with the intent of using it to house young people unable to afford rising rental costs in the city and to host political events.The house has stood empty for a number of months due to EU sanctions against a number of Russian politicians and businessmen like Volozh, who resigned from the helm of Russia's largest tech company in June following accusations by EU officials of using his search engine to censor content critical of the Kremlin over the course of its invasion of Ukraine.At the onset of Russia's invasion of Ukraine, the value of Volozh's stake in Yandex fell by approximately 60 percent after Wall Street cut traders' ability to buy or sell stock in Russian technology companies, cutting his net worth from an estimated high of about $2.6 billion to just south of $600 million, according to Forbes.And while other Russian industrialists like Oleg Tinkov and Nikolai Storonsky recently announced they would renounce their Russian citizenship over their objections to the Ukrainian invasion, Volozh has all but fallen off the radar, rarely appearing in international headlines since his resignation.That same month, activists "liberated" a French villa believed to be owned by one of Russian President Vladimir Putin's daughters, while Italian media reported that unknown activists vandalized two villas in Italy reportedly belonging to Russian propagandist Vladimir Solovyov in April."