Russia Hits Back, Freezes $129 Million of Google’s Assets in France

Google
Google's headquarters, the Googleplex.

Key Points

  • The administrator of Google’s bankrupt Russian unit has frozen about $129 million of Google’s assets in France.
  • The action is based on a Moscow court ruling that found Google made an illegal dividend payment.
  • The freeze is currently temporary and must be formally recognized by a French court, which Google can challenge.
  • Google’s Russian business collapsed in 2022 after Russian authorities seized its bank account.

In a bold legal maneuver, the administrator of Google’s now-defunct Russian business has successfully frozen nearly $130 million in assets of the tech giant in France. The move is a rare attempt by Russian authorities to chase the assets of a Western company on foreign soil, escalating the financial fallout from the war in Ukraine.

The freeze is based on a series of rulings from Moscow arbitration courts. According to a lawyer for the administrator, a Russian court found Google liable for an illegal dividend payment of approximately $126 million in 2021. This legal battle is a direct consequence of Google’s withdrawal from Russia.

The local unit filed for bankruptcy in 2022 after Russian authorities seized its bank account, just months after the full-scale invasion of Ukraine began.

For now, the asset freeze is temporary. To make it stick, the administrator’s lawyers must get the Russian court’s decision formally recognized by a French court, a process they plan to begin in the coming days.

Google will have the opportunity to challenge the freeze, and the entire legal fight in France could take more than a year to resolve.

This is not an isolated incident. The Russian administrator is reportedly pursuing similar legal actions in Spain, Turkey, and South Africa, signaling a wider, coordinated effort to enforce the Moscow court’s judgment. The move comes as tensions simmer over the potential seizure of frozen Russian state assets in Europe, turning this into a high-stakes legal and political chess match.

EDITORIAL TEAM
EDITORIAL TEAM
Al Mahmud Al Mamun leads the TechGolly editorial team. He served as Editor-in-Chief of a world-leading professional research Magazine. Rasel Hossain is supporting as Managing Editor. Our team is intercorporate with technologists, researchers, and technology writers. We have substantial expertise in Information Technology (IT), Artificial Intelligence (AI), and Embedded Technology.
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