|      LONDON    (Reuters) - Multi-millionaire art collector Charles Saatchi said on Sunday he    would divorce celebrity chef Nigella Lawson, citing his    "disappointment" that she had not defended him after photographs of    him grabbing her neck during a row caused a public outcry. Lawson, 53, is hugely    popular in Britain for her television cooking shows, which she presents in    her trademark flirtatious manner, and line of cookbooks. She is also widely known    in the United States, Australia and other English-speaking countries. "I feel that I have    clearly been a disappointment to Nigella during the last year or so,"    the 70-year-old former advertising tycoon told The Mail on Sunday newspaper. "I am disappointed    that she was advised to make no public comment to explain that I abhor    violence of any kind against women, and have never abused her physically in    any way." In June, a tabloid    newspaper published photographs of Saatchi with his hand around his wife's    neck, with her in tears, while they were having dinner on the terrace of a    seafood restaurant in London's upmarket Mayfair. Saatchi attempted to    downplay the photos, saying they depicted a "playful tiff" with his    wife of 10 years, but Lawson, the daughter of former British finance minister    Nigel Lawson, moved out of the family home soon afterwards and has not made a    public commented on the incident. Saatchi accepted a police    caution for assault after the row but groups campaigning against domestic    abuse and violence against women have complained over the lack of action    taken against him. Lawson married Saatchi in    2003 after her first husband, journalist John Diamond, died of throat cancer.    She has two teenage children, Cosima and Bruno, from her first marriage. Saatchi ran the world's    largest advertising agency Saatchi & Saatchi with his brother in the    1980s. (Reporting by William    James; Editing by Raissa Kasolowsky)  |    
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