France’s wealthiest man, billionaire Bernard Arnault (pictured), has applied for Belgian citizenship, according to reports Saturday in Belgian media, just as France seeks to pass a law taxing incomes above one million euros to the tune of 75 percent.

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AFP - Bernard Arnault, the richest man in France and the world's fourth-wealthiest, has applied for Belgian nationality as Paris moves to impose a 75-percent wealth tax, reports said Saturday.

The 63-year-old billionaire head of the LVMH luxury goods empire filed an application with parliament last week to become a naturalised Belgian citizen, the La Libre Belgique daily quoted a senior official as saying.

"The file will be treated the same as all the others," Georges Dallemagne, the head of the naturalisation commission, told the paper. "We currently have 47,000 before us."

Belgian legislation requires applicants for citizenship to have had at least three years residency in Belgium, barring which they need to prove ties to the country, Dallemagne said.

Arnault lives in Paris and has a home in Brussels, the daily said.

His application comes amid a debate on one of the main pledges that France's President Francois Hollande made during the election campaign earlier this year -- to impose a 75-percent tax on incomes above one million euros.

Press reports this week said that the government was looking to water down the measure by raising the threshold to two million euros for couples and excluding capital gains.

But on Friday Finance Minister Pierre Moscovici vowed that the campaign promise would be "strictly" implemented.

The new tax is due to be included in the 2013 budget, which the government expects to finalise later this month.

Arnault, whose fortune is estimated to stand at 41 billion dollars by Forbes magazine, was a close ally of France's former right-wing president Nicolas Sarkozy.

Following the election of France's previous Socialist president Francois Mitterrand in 1981, Arnault lived in the United States for three years, returning to France after the Socialists switched to a more conservative economic course.

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