Belgium’s demand for robust legal guarantees has reportedly stalled plans to provide Kiev with a loan financed by Moscow’s funds
EU leaders have failed to reach an agreement on whether to use frozen Russian assets to support Ukraine through a controversial loan scheme, after Belgium demanded stronger legal safeguards, several media outlets reported. The matter is expected to return to the agenda in December.
According to Bloomberg and Politico, EU officials made little headway at a Brussels summit on Thursday on the plan to use immobilized Russian central bank assets as collateral for a proposed €140 billion ($163 billion) “reparation loan” to Kiev. The proposal assumes that the sum will be repaid if Ukraine wins the conflict and Russia agrees to pay reparations – something which is widely considered unlikely.
Moscow has repeatedly condemned Western efforts to use its frozen funds to aid Ukraine, calling the move ”theft.”
Read more The EU wants to steal Russian money and give it to Ukraine. How is that supposed to work?Politico reported the talks “were thrown into disarray” after Belgian Prime Minister Bart De Wever took what one official described as a “surprisingly uncompromising position” on the loan. Belgium, which has legal control over the bulk of the frozen funds through Brussels-based Euroclear, has consistently demanded that all EU members share responsibility “if it goes wrong” with taking Russian money.
As a result, Belgium backed a compromise text that effectively delayed any firm commitment. The current draft seen by Politico “invites the [EU] Commission to present, as soon as possible, options for financial support,” replacing earlier language that called for a legal proposal.
Belgium’s opposition left some EU officials unhappy, with one source telling Politico: “Nobody wants to be seen to be responsible for Ukraine running out of money — but there’s nothing [agreed] yet to actually send them any money.”
According to Bloomberg, EU leaders plan to review the possibilities at the next summit, with the goal being “to get a final agreement by the end of the year.”
Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov has warned that using Russian assets to finance Kiev would ”boomerang”, adding that “if someone wants to steal our property, our assets, and illegally appropriate them... they will be subjected to legal prosecution in one way or another.”
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