This post is in partnership with Time. The article below was originally published at Time.com.
One
of the richest men in Russia, Alisher Usmanov, has come forward as the
anonymous buyer of James Watson's Nobel medal, which was sold for more
than $4 million at an auction at Christie's in New York last week.
Usmanov, who is worth an estimated $15.9 billion,
has now revealed he will return the piece to Watson who shared the 1962
Nobel prize in medicine for discovering the structure of DNA, alongside
Francis Crick and Maurice Wilkins.
This was the first time a living recipient of the Nobel Prize has sold their medal. Watson told the Financial Times
in November that he had been spurned by the scientific community and
made to feel like an "unperson" since he gave an interview in 2007 in
which he suggested that black people were inherently less intelligent than white people.
Watson has said
he needs the money but would also give some of the proceeds to
different research institutions and charities and that he hopes to
re-enter public life as a result.
"A situation in which an outstanding scientist sells a medal recognizing his achievements is unacceptable," Usmanov said in a statement.
"It
is important for me that the money that I spent on this medal will go
to supporting scientific research," Usmanov added, "and the medal will
stay with the person who deserved it."
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