US banks to begin reporting Russian assets for eventual forfeiture under new law

The Treasury Department is seen in Washington, Jan. 18, 2023. The department ordered the nation’s banking industry to start disclosing their holdings of Russian assets on Tuesday, July 23, 2024, with the goal of eventually seizing those billions of dollars in assets and selling them to aid the devastated Ukrainian economy. (AP)
Short Url
Updated 24 July 2024
Follow

US banks to begin reporting Russian assets for eventual forfeiture under new law

  • If a bank discovers any new Russian assets on their books after the deadline, those assets need to be reported within 10 days, the Treasury Department said

NEW YORK: The Treasury Department ordered the nation’s banking industry to start disclosing its holdings of Russian assets on Tuesday, with the goal of eventually seizing those billions of dollars in assets and selling them to aid the devastated Ukrainian economy.
The disclosure is required under a new law passed by Congress earlier this year known as the REPO Act, which gives the US government the authority to seize Russian state assets held by US banks, with the goal of eventually selling them and giving those funds to Ukraine. While the vast bulk of Russian assets are held in Europe, it is estimated that the US banking system holds as much as $6 billion in Russian assets in trust.
Banks will need to report Russian assets on their books no later than Aug. 2 to the Office of Foreign Assets Control. If a bank discovers any new Russian assets on their books after the deadline, those assets need to be reported within 10 days, the Treasury Department said.
Russia’s war in Ukraine, which began in February 2022, has killed tens of thousands but has also caused significant devastation to Ukraine’s economy and infrastructure. The World Bank estimated in February that Ukraine will need $486 billion for recovery and reconstruction, a figure that has only risen as the war has continued.
The US, Canada, France, Germany Italy, the UK and Japan — commonly known as the G7 — froze roughly $300 billion worth of Russian assets at the start of the war. These assets included hard currency, as well as gold and investments in publicly and privately-held companies. But there has been little conversation until this year about what to do with those frozen assets, until the idea of forfeiture and liquidation was included in the REPO Act.


Eighteen die after migrant boat sinks off southern Greek island

Updated 3 sec ago
Follow

Eighteen die after migrant boat sinks off southern Greek island

  • The boat was initially detected by a Turkish cargo ship
  • The survivors were being taken to the island of Crete

ATHENS: Eighteen migrants drowned when their boat overturned 26 miles (40 km) south of the tiny southern Greek island of Chrysi, a coast guard official said on Saturday, while two were rescued from the sea.
The boat was initially detected by a Turkish cargo ship, which contacted the Greek authorities.
The survivors were being taken to the island of Crete, the official added.
Greece was on the front line of a 2015-16 migration crisis when more than a million people from the Middle East and Africa crossed into Europe.
Flows have ebbed since then but the last year has seen a steep rise in migrant boats, mainly from Libya, heading for Crete, Gavdos and Chrysi — the three Aegean islands nearest to the African coast. Fatal accidents remain common.