KYIV, Ukraine
The new Group of Seven (G7) plan to fund Ukraine using profits from frozen Russian assets is a “breakthrough,” but Ukraine’s goal is still to seize the full worth of the assets, said experts speaking at a panel event in Kyiv discussing Russian asset seizure on June 17.
“This money will obviously
help Ukraine survive,” said Andrii Mikheiev, an international law and
anti-corruption expert at the advocacy NGO International Center for Ukrainian
Victory.
“But as for justice and as for
reconstruction, I don't think we're talking about an amount of money that would
be enough.”
The G7 leaders confirmed on June 13 a plan to provide Ukraine with a
$50 billion loan by the end of the year, repaid using interest from
approximately $300 billion of Russian Central Bank assets frozen after the
invasion in 2022.
The bank’s assets are tied up
in foreign bank accounts in local currencies, gold, bank deposits, and
securities like bonds and stocks. The vast majority are in Europe, particularly
Belgium, with the Brussels-based company Euroclear holding some $192 billion
in Russian assets.
The details of the agreement —
including who will fund the loan and how the money will be spent — are still
being finalized with little information available to the public.
In a statement released by the
G7, the group noted that the loan was “without prejudice to possible other
contributions,” leaving the door open to future confiscation of the assets
themselves.
While the $50 billion loan
will not be able to cover the $486 billion recovery costs, estimated by the World Bank,
it will be able to sustain Ukraine for a year, said Yuliya Ziskina, a senior
legal fellow for the nonprofit advocacy group Razom for Ukraine.
She hailed the loan as a
“breakthrough” and a catalyst for further conversations. However, she noted
that the plan goes out of its way to avoid touching Russian assets.
“We are moving in the right
direction, but it's important to still keep our eyes on the ultimate goal,” she
said.
The event, which discussed
ways to confiscate Russian assets in favor of Ukraine, was hosted by the Center
for Economic Strategy (CES) in coordination with the International Center for
Ukrainian Victory and KI Insights. KI Insights is an analytical unit backed by
the Kyiv Independent.
Kyiv suited up with
international lawyers in the first weeks of the full-scale invasion in the
hopes of seizing the assets quickly. But Ukraine has struggled to convince its
allies to move on the issue of fully confiscating the frozen assets amid
political debates.
The G7 agreement is a cohesive
step forward after two years fraught with disputes between Ukraine’s
allies. Lobbying from opponents as well as disagreements over what the money
should be used for held up decision-making while Ukraine struggled to cover
its fiscal deficit and the cost of damages rose.
France, Germany, Japan, and
Italy are particularly resistant to the idea of full
confiscation due to legal ramifications and a fear of catastrophic fallout in
financial markets, according to the Financial Times.
Opponents warn that Moscow
could seize Western assets located in Russia following threats from Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov. Western
companies are also worried that they will lose their business ventures and
investments in Russia, according to Timothy
Ash, a senior strategist at BlueBay Asset Management.
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