Ukraine war: EU releases interest from Russian assets

Ukraine war: EU releases interest from Russian assets

200 billion euros of the Russian central bank have been frozen because of the war of aggression against Ukraine. Now the EU is releasing the interest rates – and already knows what to do with the money.

For the first time, the EU is releasing interest income from frozen Russian state assets for the defense and reconstruction of Ukraine. EU Commission President Ursula von der Leyen announced a transfer of 1.5 billion euros.

“There is no better symbol or use for the Kremlin’s money than making Ukraine and all of Europe a safer place to live,” she wrote on X, formerly Twitter.

Money to go to military technology for Ukraine

The money in question now is interest income from frozen assets of the Russian central bank in the EU. The EU had already decided in principle in the spring to use these for Ukraine. The money is now flowing to countries such as Germany and the Czech Republic, which will then use it to provide Ukraine with air defense equipment or artillery shells in a timely manner.

According to the Commission, around 210 billion euros of the Russian central bank are frozen in the EU. The Brussels-based financial institution Euroclear recently announced that it had collected around 4.4 billion euros in interest in 2023.

The proposal for the indirect use of Russian funds for Ukraine was made to the governments of the EU states by Commission President von der Leyen and EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell in March. It provides that 90 percent of the usable interest income from the safekeeping of Russian central bank funds should be channeled into the EU fund for financing military equipment and training. The remaining ten percent should be used for direct financial aid for Ukraine.

Kremlin speaks of “expropriation”

There are currently no plans to use the Russian central bank funds directly through an expropriation decision. One reason for this is legal concerns and likely retaliatory measures. Moscow had already warned the EU last year against confiscating the property of the Russian state or Russian citizens.

How Ukraine is now recruiting prisoners for the war

Ukraine is now recruiting prisoners for the war – including murderers

03:47 min

The Kremlin has already criticized EU plans to use interest income from frozen Russian assets to benefit Ukraine as “expropriation.” Brussels had opted for a “reduced variant” in its approach against Russia by only considering the interest, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said at the time. “But even this reduced variant is nothing other than expropriation,” he added.

Source: Stern

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Latest Posts

Ukraine: Russian attacks shake Kyiv again

Ukraine: Russian attacks shake Kyiv again

War against Ukraine Russian attacks shake Kyiv again: fires and injured Listen article Copy the current link Add to the memorial list Russia fires dozens