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UKRAINE

France freezes €850 million of Russian assets

France has seized around €850 million of Russian oligarchs' assets on its soil, Finance Minister Bruno Le Maire said on Sunday. 

France freezes €850 million of Russian assets
French Economy Minister Bruno Le Maire speaks during a press conference to present an economic and social resilience plan, in Paris, on March 16, 2022. (Photo by Thomas SAMSON / AFP)

“We have immobilised … 150 million euros in individual’s accounts, credit lines in France and in French establishments,” Le Maire told French television as Paris hits Moscow over its invasion of Ukraine. 

Furthermore, “we have immobilised 539 million euros in real estate on French territory, corresponding to some 390 properties or apartments and we have sequestered two yachts (with a value of) 150 million euros,” said Le Maire. 

“In total that is (almost) 850 millions euros in assets belonging to Russian oligarchs which have been immobilised on French soil,” he added.  The French crackdown means the owners are unable to, sell on or monetise their assets. 

Notwithstanding, “they are not seized in the sense that the state becomes the owner and could then sell them on.

For there to be seizure there has to be a penal offence”, Le Maire stipulated. 

“The sanctions are hitting Russia, the state, Vladimir Putin hard,” Le Maire went on. 

Since Russian began its war in Ukraine on February 24 Western states have responded with a wide-ranging package of stiff financial sanctions. 

On Friday, Russia’s central bank said the extent of the sanctions would make macro economic forecasting “extremely difficult”. 

Four days after the invasion began Moscow hiked its main interest rate from 9.5 to 20 percent and the response to the conflict has largely cut Russia’s financial sector off from the global economy. 

SEE ALSO: Côte d’Azur mansions, jets, yachts: What is France likely to seize from Russian oligarchs?

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POLITICS

Police shoot man dead in New Caledonia after protesters attack

A policeman in riot-hit New Caledonia on Friday killed a 48-year-old man after being attacked by demonstrators in the aftermath of President Emmanuel Macron's visit to the French Pacific territory, prosecutors said.

Police shoot man dead in New Caledonia after protesters attack

A police officer and his colleague were “physically attacked by a group of around fifteen individuals” in Dumbea just outside the capital Noumea, forcing him to draw his weapon, said prosecutor Yves Dupas.

The total death toll from over a week of riots now stands at seven.

“In circumstances that have yet to be determined, the officer is said to have fired a shot from his service weapon to extricate himself from the physical altercation”, Dupas said in a statement.

“Initial findings show traces of blows to the officers’ faces,” the statement said.

The officer who fired the shots was taken into custody, the prosecutor said, adding that a probe into voluntary manslaughter by a person in authority was launched. Such legal moves are usually automatic in France when a policeman kills an individual.

The investigation will be conducted “with all the objectivity and impartiality necessary to establish the truth”, the prosecutor added.

The man was killed after Macron flew to the Pacific archipelago, located some 17,000 kilometres from mainland France, in an urgent bid to defuse a political crisis after more than a week of riots over voting reform.

Seven people, including two gendarmes, have now been killed since riots broke out on May 13.

But this was the first time that a civilian was killed by a member of law enforcement since the start of the violence.

France has enforced a state of emergency in New Caledonia, flying hundreds of police and military reinforcements to restore order.

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