Belgium freezes €50 billion Russian assets

Belgium freezes €50 billion Russian assets
Russian President Vladimir Putin. Credit: Belga

Belgium has frozen €50.5 billion financial assets belonging to Russian individuals, companies and other legal entities subject to sanctions after Russia's invasion of Ukraine, De Tijd reported on Tuesday.

The frozen funds include a range of assets such as cash and stocks, which are located in Belgium and owned by 1,229 people and 110 other entities, such as Russian politicians, oligarchs, banks and companies. Some of these stakeholders were sanctioned when Russia annexed Crimea in 2014 but most of the sanctions were introduced when Russia invaded Ukraine in February.

The EU's latest package of sanctions against Russia added several banks to the list, including Sberbank (Russia's largest bank) and VTB, another prominent bank in Russia with the state as the largest stakeholder.

More than other EU countries

Belgium has frozen considerably more Russian funds than other Member States. Just three weeks ago, European Justice chief Didier Reynders announced that then €13.8 billion financial assets had been frozen across the EU. Reynders indicated that over €12 billion had been frozen by other EU countries, but without specifying which they are.

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In addition to, Belgium has blocked €217.1 billion in transactions since the war in Ukraine.

Across the EU, luxury yachts and opulent properties that belong to oligarchs have been confiscated. A spokesperson for Belgium's treasury said that real estate belonging to Russian stakeholders hasn't yet been targeted by financial sanctions.


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