Bart De Wever has threatened to sue the bloc if it puts his country at risk by forcing an illegal seizure of Moscow’s assets
The latest “very unwise and ill-considered” EU proposal to tap frozen Russian sovereign assets would amount to “stealing,” Belgian Prime Minister Bart De Wever said on Wednesday, according to VRT news.
Last week, European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen proposed to use the immobilized funds to back a loan for Ukraine. She also noted that the decision could be made by a qualified majority of bloc members, potentially bypassing Belgian opposition.
Belgium faces the biggest legal and financial risks as the bulk of the Russian money, €185 billion ($216 billion), is held in Belgium-based clearing house Euroclear.
“There really are better solutions than stealing money from the Russian central bank… I find it very unwise and ill-considered,” De Wever said, according to VRT.
“It’s money from a country we’re not at war with… It would be like getting into an embassy, taking all the furniture and selling it.”
De Wever said he’s not ruling out taking legal action against the EU if it decides to push for a decision that is “at odds with legality” and “poses great risks” to Belgium.
Von der Leyen’s proposal seeks to provide Ukraine with €90 billion over the next two years. One of its key points is a long-debated “reparations loan” backed by immobilized Russian funds that would require financial institutions holding the assets to transfer them to a new loan instrument.
The EU is also reportedly pushing to decouple the asset freeze from the bloc’s sanctions on Russia and make it indefinite, in an effort to prevent opposition from Hungary. Currently, both measures require regular renewals by unanimous decision.
Moscow will retaliate against any “expropriation of Russian assets” and has already prepared a response, Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said on Wednesday. Kiev’s Western backers have no more money left for funding the Ukraine conflict other than “robbing” Russia, he argued.