The European Union has frozen Russian assets worth €13,8 billion. A large part of them, namely 12 billion dollars, came from five EU member states.
Source: EU Justice Commissioner Didier Reynders
“For the moment, we have frozen – coming from oligarchs and other entities – 13.8 billion euros ($13.8 billion), so it’s quite huge,” Reynders told reporters in Prague.
“But I must say that a very large part of it is more than $12 billion coming from five member states,” he added.
He declined to name the five countries but added that he expected other countries in the 27-member bloc to step up their efforts soon. In mid-June, German Finance Minister Christian Lindner estimated the value of assets frozen by Germany alone at $4.48 billion.
In late June, the international sanctions group said its members, including several EU countries, had frozen $30 billion in assets of Russian oligarchs and officials.
Andriy Yermak, head of the Office of the President of Ukraine also confirmed the blocking of assets.
See also: The EU has begun studying the legal aspects of using frozen Russian assets to restore Ukraine