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Swiss have frozen $8 billion in assets under Russia sanctions

Reuters

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Swiss have frozen $8 billion in assets under Russia sanctions

CALL FOR PEACE. People hold banners and a Ukrainian flag as they take part in a demonstration for peace, amid Russia's invasion of Ukraine, in Bern, Switzerland, April 2, 2022.

Arnd Wiegmann/Reuters

The assets include money in frozen bank accounts and properties in four Swiss cantons

ZURICH, Switzerland – Switzerland has so far frozen some 7.5 billion Swiss francs ($8.03 billion) in funds and assets under sanctions against Russians to punish Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine, government official Erwin Bollinger said on Thursday, April 7.

The assets included money in frozen bank accounts and properties in four Swiss cantons, Bollinger told a news conference in Bern. He did not name the cantons.

In a sharp deviation from the country’s traditional neutrality, Switzerland on February 28 adopted European Union sanctions against Russians involved in Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine. It is adopting other EU sanctions as well.

“Currently around 7.5 billion Swiss francs are blocked on the basis of the sanctions against Russia,” said Bollinger, a senior official at the State Secretariat for Economic Affairs (SECO) agency overseeing sanctions.

Thursday’s report marked an increase from an update two weeks ago, when Bollinger said Switzerland has frozen around 5.75 billion Swiss francs worth of Russian assets.

Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelenskiy last month heaped pressure on Switzerland – a popular destination for Moscow’s elite and a holding place for Russian wealth – to more quickly identify and freeze assets of hundreds of sanctioned Russians.

Bollinger said Swiss officials met Ukrainian government representatives on Wednesday, April 6, to discuss implementation of the sanctions, but he gave no details.

He referred to an estimate by the Swiss Bankers Association of 150 billion to 200 billion francs worth of overall Russian wealth in Swiss banks.

“Not every Russian person is sanctioned,” Bollinger added. “At present, there are just under 900 people.”

“As you can imagine it is often very complex to determine the effective control [of assets]. Funds are thus in part blocked provisionally by banks. The amounts reported are only a snapshot,” he added.

“The tendency is to block more than would be necessary.” – Rappler.com

$1 = 0.9336 Swiss francs

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