The Bank of Russia’s proposed restrictions have no found support in other government bodies
The Bank of Russia’s plan to put a ban on cryptocurrency is not supported by some representatives of the country’s authorities, including parliament, the police, and the Federal Security Service (FSB), two lawmakers have claimed.
According to Anatoly Aksakov, the Chairman of the State Duma Committee on Financial Markets, and Andrey Lugovoy, the First Deputy Chairman of the Committee on Security and Corruption Control, newly proposed legislation that would effectively stop Russians from using cryptocurrency does not have widespread support.
Last week, the bank announced that spending, transferring, and mining cryptocurrency would be made illegal, effectively reducing it to just an asset without any uses other than the storage of value. All financial enterprises would also be banned from holding crypto.
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However, according to Aksakov and Lugovoy, speaking to a Russian online news outlet, the central bank’s stance is at odds with the view of the police, the FSB, the General Prosecutor’s Office, and the Investigative Committee, as well as parliament, with not a single body coming out in support to the bank’s position. According to Lenta, MPs are worried that the newly announced ban “could turn Russia into a laughing stock for the whole world” as there is no practical way to stop the circulation of cryptocurrency.
“In the past, we had a somewhat incomprehensible attitude towards social networks, and we began to regulate them slowly. We banned certain social networks, and you know how that ended,” Lugovoy said, presumably referring to the messaging app Telegram, which Moscow famously failed to block despite banning millions of IP addresses.
“In my understanding, from a practical point of view, it is impossible to prohibit the circulation of cryptocurrencies… let those who want to ban it explain to us how they plan to do it from a practical point of view,” he continued.