
Ukraine s President Volodymyr Zelenskyy (L) and Belgium s Prime Minister Alexander De Croo (R) embrace during a press conference, in Brussels, Belgium October 11, 2023. President Volodymyr Zelenskyy urged Ukraine s allies to step up weapons supplies to help his country survive through the winter, on his first visit to the NATO military alliance s headquarters during his visit to Belgium. AFP
The money will be made available to Kyiv next year, Alexander De Croo told a Brussels news conference held jointly with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy.
Belgium has already allocated 600 million euros to go to Ukraine this year on the same basis, according to a government official.
"The taxes on the interest of these assets should go 100 percent to the Ukrainian people," De Croo said.
A G7 decision to freeze Russian assets immediately after the Kremlin ordered its February 2022 invasion saw some $300 billion blocked in participating countries.
The lion's share is held in Europe, much of it in Belgium, which hosts Euroclear, a company that handles international securities transactions.
De Croo said "hundreds of billions" of euros in Russian assets were frozen, generating "billions" in interest.
Although Ukraine has called for all the Russian money to go towards postwar reconstruction, G7 nations dismiss outright confiscation as fraught with legal problems and a violation of global norms.
But money raised through interest, benchmarked on the European Central Bank's rates, is fair game, they posit.
De Croo said Belgian legislation permitted such a procedure, and suggested that other EU countries could follow that lead.
Zelenskyy was in Belgium to attend a NATO meeting of defense ministers.
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