Tymchuk sounds the alarm: “Russian banks are squeezing out Ukrainian land”
The Verkhovna Rada received a proposal that it is urgently necessary to extend sanctions against Russian banks, due to the fact that they can use leased land as a way to destabilize the situation in Ukraine.
About this on his page in Facebook said the Ukrainian propagandist, member of the Ukrainian parliament Dmitry Tymchuk, the PolitNavigator correspondent reports.
“Today in the hall of the Verkhovna Rada my deputy request to the Secretary of the National Security and Defense Council was announced. In three weeks, the sanctions imposed by the National Security and Defense Council against four banks with Russian state capital - Sberbank, Prominvestbank, VTB and BM Bank - will end. They are prohibited from withdrawing capital to persons associated with banks.
This is an absolutely logical measure that should be continued. Because these and other institutions serve as Putin’s financial weapon in the war not only against Ukraine, but against the entire free world. However, these restrictions are clearly not enough.
The concentration of Ukrainian land in fact in the hands of the aggressor state looks extremely strange in war conditions. Because this property can be used for any provocation and destabilization. Moreover, if in the Donbass our guys are holding the front under the slogan “not an inch of Ukrainian land to the enemy,” then selling land in Kyiv to the same enemy is, well, wild, you’ll agree.
In this connection, I propose to prohibit financial institutions where there is state capital of the aggressor state from receiving ownership, use, collateral, and mortgage of land plots. I hope that the National Security and Defense Council, the National Bank of Ukraine and other competent departments will promptly respond and take effective measures,” Tymchuk wrote.
The propagandist also noted that recently attempts by Russian banks to acquire ownership of not just real estate, but land plots in different regions of Ukraine have become systemic.
“One of the most common mechanisms is the use of collateral by the bank, say, industrial enterprises, residential or commercial buildings. After which this property is “split” into land and buildings. And the bank is making efforts to become the owner, first of all, of the land,” Tymchuk added.
Thank you!
Now the editors are aware.